National Institute of Complementary Medicine, School of Science and Health, University of Western Sydney, Locked Bag 1797, Penrith, NSW 2751, Australia.
BMC Complement Altern Med. 2014 Oct 24;14:411. doi: 10.1186/1472-6882-14-411.
Negative affective states such as anxiety, depression and stress are significant risk factors for cardiovascular disease, particularly in cardiac and post-cardiac rehabilitation populations.Yoga is a balanced practice of physical exercise, breathing control and meditation that can reduce psychosocial symptoms as well as improve cardiovascular and cognitive function. It has the potential to positively affect multiple disease pathways and may prove to be a practical adjunct to cardiac rehabilitation in further reducing cardiac risk factors as well as improving self-efficacy and post-cardiac rehabilitation adherence to healthy lifestyle behaviours.
This is a parallel arm, multi-centre, randomised controlled trial that will assess the outcomes of post- phase 2 cardiac rehabilitation patients assigned to a yoga intervention in comparison to a no-treatment wait-list control group. Participants randomised to the yoga group will engage in a 12 week yoga program comprising of two group based sessions and one self-administered home session each week. Group based sessions will be led by an experienced yoga instructor. This will involve teaching beginner students a hatha yoga sequence that incorporates asana (poses and postures), pranayama (breathing control) and meditation. The primary outcomes of this study are negative affective states of anxiety, depression and stress assessed using the Depression Anxiety Stress Scale. Secondary outcomes include measures of quality of life, and cardiovascular and cognitive function. The cardiovascular outcomes will include blood pressure, heart rate, heart rate variability, pulse wave velocity, carotid intima media thickness measurements, lipid/glucose profiles and C-reactive protein assays. Assessments will be conducted prior to (week 0), mid-way through (week 6) and following the intervention period (week 12) as well as at a four week follow-up (week 16).
This study will determine the effect of yoga practice on negative affective states, cardiovascular and cognitive function in post-phase 2 cardiac rehabilitation patients. The findings may provide evidence to incorporate yoga into standardised cardiac rehabilitation programs as a practical adjunct to improve the management of psychosocial symptoms associated with cardiovascular events in addition to improving patients' cognitive and cardiovascular functions.
ACTRN12612000358842.
焦虑、抑郁和压力等负面情绪状态是心血管疾病的重要危险因素,尤其是在心脏和心脏康复后人群中。瑜伽是一种身体锻炼、呼吸控制和冥想的平衡练习,可以减轻心理社会症状,同时改善心血管和认知功能。它有可能对多种疾病途径产生积极影响,并可能被证明是心脏康复的实用辅助手段,进一步降低心脏危险因素,提高自我效能和心脏康复后对健康生活方式行为的依从性。
这是一项平行臂、多中心、随机对照试验,将评估第二阶段心脏康复后患者被分配到瑜伽干预组与无治疗等待对照组的结果。随机分配到瑜伽组的参与者将参加为期 12 周的瑜伽计划,包括每周两次小组课程和一次自我管理的家庭课程。小组课程将由经验丰富的瑜伽教练授课。这将涉及教授初学者哈他瑜伽序列,包括体位(姿势和姿势)、呼吸控制和冥想。本研究的主要结果是使用抑郁焦虑压力量表评估焦虑、抑郁和压力等负面情绪状态。次要结果包括生活质量和心血管及认知功能的测量。心血管结果将包括血压、心率、心率变异性、脉搏波速度、颈动脉内膜中层厚度测量、血脂/血糖谱和 C 反应蛋白测定。评估将在干预前(第 0 周)、中途(第 6 周)和干预后(第 12 周)以及 4 周随访(第 16 周)进行。
本研究将确定瑜伽练习对第二阶段心脏康复患者负面情绪状态、心血管和认知功能的影响。研究结果可能为将瑜伽纳入标准化心脏康复计划提供证据,作为改善与心血管事件相关的心理社会症状的实用辅助手段,同时改善患者的认知和心血管功能。
ACTRN12612000358842。