Frontiers in Physiology (Oct 2017)

Intensifying Functional Task Practice to Meet Aerobic Training Guidelines in Stroke Survivors

  • Liam P. Kelly,
  • Augustine J. Devasahayam,
  • Arthur R. Chaves,
  • Elizabeth M. Wallack,
  • Jason McCarthy,
  • Fabien A. Basset,
  • Michelle Ploughman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2017.00809
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Objective: To determine whether stroke survivors could maintain workloads during functional task practice that can reach moderate levels of cardiometabolic stress (i.e., ≥40% oxygen uptake reserve (V˙O2R) for ≥20 min) without the use of ergometer-based exercise.Design: Cross-sectional study using convenience sampling.Setting: Research laboratory in a tertiary rehabilitation hospital.Participants: Chronic hemiparetic stroke survivors (>6-months) who could provide consent and walk with or without assistance.Intervention: A single bout of intermittent functional training (IFT). The IFT protocol lasted 30 min and involved performing impairment specific multi-joint task-oriented movements structured into circuits lasting ~3 min and allowing 30–45 s recovery between circuits. The aim was to achieve an average heart rate (HR) 30-50 beats above resting without using traditional ergometer-based aerobic exercise.Outcome measures: Attainment of indicators for moderate intensity aerobic exercise. Oxygen uptake (V˙O2), carbon dioxide production (V˙CO2), and HR were recorded throughout the 30 min IFT protocol. Values were reported as percentage of V˙O2R, HR reserve (HRR) and HRR calculated from predicted maximum HR (HRRpred), which were determined from a prior maximal graded exercise test.Results: Ten (3-female) chronic (38 ± 33 months) stroke survivors (70% ischemic) with significant residual impairments (NIHSS: 3 ± 2) and a high prevalence of comorbid conditions (80% ≥ 1) participated. IFT significantly increased all measures of exercise intensity compared to resting levels: V˙O2 (Δ 820 ± 290 ml min−1, p < 0.001), HR (Δ 42 ± 14 bpm, p < 0.001), and energy expenditure (EE; Δ 4.0 ± 1.4 kcal min−1, p < 0.001). Also, mean values for percentage of V˙O2R (62 ± 19), HRR (55 ± 14), and HRRpred (52 ± 18) were significantly higher than the minimum threshold (40%) indicating achievement of moderate intensity aerobic exercise (p = 0.004, 0.016, and 0.043, respectively).Conclusion: Sufficient workloads to achieve moderate levels of cardiometabolic stress can be maintained in chronic stroke survivors using impairment-focused functional movements that are not dependent on ergometers or other specialized equipment.

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