School of Sport, Exercise and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
International Collaboration on Repair Discoveries (ICORD), University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
PLoS Med. 2023 Nov 27;20(11):e1004082. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1004082. eCollection 2023 Nov.
A low level of cardiorespiratory fitness [CRF; defined as peak oxygen uptake ([Formula: see text]O2peak) or peak power output (PPO)] is a widely reported consequence of spinal cord injury (SCI) and a major risk factor associated with chronic disease. However, CRF can be modified by exercise. This systematic review with meta-analysis and meta-regression aimed to assess whether certain SCI characteristics and/or specific exercise considerations are moderators of changes in CRF.
Databases (MEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL, and Web of Science) were searched from inception to March 2023. A primary meta-analysis was conducted including randomised controlled trials (RCTs; exercise interventions lasting >2 weeks relative to control groups). A secondary meta-analysis pooled independent exercise interventions >2 weeks from longitudinal pre-post and RCT studies to explore whether subgroup differences in injury characteristics and/or exercise intervention parameters explained CRF changes. Further analyses included cohort, cross-sectional, and observational study designs. Outcome measures of interest were absolute (A[Formula: see text]O2peak) or relative [Formula: see text]O2peak (R[Formula: see text]O2peak), and/or PPO. Bias/quality was assessed via The Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 and the National Institute of Health Quality Assessment Tools. Certainty of the evidence was assessed using the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. Random effects models were used in all meta-analyses and meta-regressions. Of 21,020 identified records, 120 studies comprising 29 RCTs, 67 pre-post studies, 11 cohort, 7 cross-sectional, and 6 observational studies were included. The primary meta-analysis revealed significant improvements in A[Formula: see text]O2peak [0.16 (0.07, 0.25) L/min], R[Formula: see text]O2peak [2.9 (1.8, 3.9) mL/kg/min], and PPO [9 (5, 14) W] with exercise, relative to controls (p < 0.001). Ninety-six studies (117 independent exercise interventions comprising 1,331 adults with SCI) were included in the secondary, pooled meta-analysis which demonstrated significant increases in A[Formula: see text]O2peak [0.22 (0.17, 0.26) L/min], R[Formula: see text]O2peak [2.8 (2.2, 3.3) mL/kg/min], and PPO [11 (9, 13) W] (p < 0.001) following exercise interventions. There were subgroup differences for R[Formula: see text]O2peak based on exercise modality (p = 0.002) and intervention length (p = 0.01), but there were no differences for A[Formula: see text]O2peak. There were subgroup differences (p ≤ 0.018) for PPO based on time since injury, neurological level of injury, exercise modality, and frequency. The meta-regression found that studies with a higher mean age of participants were associated with smaller changes in A[Formula: see text]O2peak and R[Formula: see text]O2peak (p < 0.10). GRADE indicated a moderate level of certainty in the estimated effect for R[Formula: see text]O2peak, but low levels for A[Formula: see text]O2peak and PPO. This review may be limited by the small number of RCTs, which prevented a subgroup analysis within this specific study design.
Our primary meta-analysis confirms that performing exercise >2 weeks results in significant improvements to A[Formula: see text]O2peak, R[Formula: see text]O2peak, and PPO in individuals with SCI. The pooled meta-analysis subgroup comparisons identified that exercise interventions lasting up to 12 weeks yield the greatest change in R[Formula: see text]O2peak. Upper-body aerobic exercise and resistance training also appear the most effective at improving R[Formula: see text]O2peak and PPO. Furthermore, acutely injured, individuals with paraplegia, exercising for ≥3 sessions/week will likely experience the greatest change in PPO. Ageing seemingly diminishes the adaptive CRF responses to exercise training in individuals with SCI.
PROSPERO: CRD42018104342.
心肺功能适应度(CRF;定义为最大摄氧量 ([Formula: see text]O2peak) 或最大功率输出 (PPO))是脊髓损伤 (SCI) 的一个广泛报道的后果,也是与慢性疾病相关的主要风险因素。然而,运动可以改变 CRF。本系统评价采用荟萃分析和荟萃回归,旨在评估 SCI 特征和/或特定运动考虑因素是否是 CRF 变化的调节剂。
从创建到 2023 年 3 月,对数据库(MEDLINE、EMBASE、CENTRAL 和 Web of Science)进行了检索。进行了主要的荟萃分析,包括随机对照试验 (RCT;相对于对照组持续 >2 周的运动干预)。二次荟萃分析汇总了来自纵向前后和 RCT 研究的 >2 周独立运动干预,以探讨损伤特征和/或运动干预参数的亚组差异是否解释了 CRF 的变化。进一步的分析包括队列、横断面和观察性研究设计。感兴趣的结果测量是绝对 ([Formula: see text]O2peak) 或相对 ([Formula: see text]O2peak) [Formula: see text]O2peak 和/或 PPO。通过 Cochrane 风险偏倚 2 和国家卫生研究院质量评估工具评估偏倚/质量。使用随机效应模型进行所有荟萃分析和荟萃回归。在 21020 条鉴定记录中,包括 29 项 RCT、67 项前后研究、11 项队列研究、7 项横断面研究和 6 项观察性研究的 120 项研究被纳入。主要荟萃分析显示,与对照组相比,运动后 A[Formula: see text]O2peak [0.16 (0.07, 0.25) L/min]、R[Formula: see text]O2peak [2.9 (1.8, 3.9) mL/kg/min] 和 PPO [9 (5, 14) W] 显著改善(p < 0.001)。96 项研究(117 项独立运动干预,包括 1331 名成人 SCI)纳入二次,汇总荟萃分析显示,运动后 A[Formula: see text]O2peak [0.22 (0.17, 0.26) L/min]、R[Formula: see text]O2peak [2.8 (2.2, 3.3) mL/kg/min] 和 PPO [11 (9, 13) W] 显著增加(p < 0.001)。基于运动方式(p = 0.002)和干预时间(p = 0.01),R[Formula: see text]O2peak 存在亚组差异,但 A[Formula: see text]O2peak 没有差异。基于受伤时间、损伤的神经水平、运动方式和频率,PPO 存在亚组差异(p ≤ 0.018)。荟萃回归发现,参与者的平均年龄较高与 A[Formula: see text]O2peak 和 R[Formula: see text]O2peak 的变化较小有关(p < 0.10)。GRADE 表明,对于 R[Formula: see text]O2peak,估计效果的确定性处于中度水平,但对于 A[Formula: see text]O2peak 和 PPO,则处于低水平。本综述可能受到 RCT 数量较少的限制,这使得无法在特定研究设计内进行亚组分析。
我们的主要荟萃分析证实,进行 >2 周的运动可显著改善 SCI 患者的 A[Formula: see text]O2peak、R[Formula: see text]O2peak 和 PPO。汇总的荟萃分析亚组比较表明,持续长达 12 周的运动干预可使 R[Formula: see text]O2peak 发生最大变化。上半身有氧运动和阻力训练似乎也最能有效提高 R[Formula: see text]O2peak 和 PPO。此外,急性损伤、截瘫患者、每周进行≥3 次运动的患者,其 PPO 变化可能最大。衰老似乎会降低 SCI 患者对运动训练的心肺功能适应度的适应性反应。
PROSPERO:CRD42018104342。