New Insights in the Prescription of Exercise for Coronary Patients
- 1 April 2003
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing
- Vol. 18 (2) , 116-123
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005082-200304000-00007
Abstract
Prescribing exercise for cardiac patients is comparable in many ways to prescribing medications; that is, one recommends an optimal dosage according to individual needs and clinical status. Recent research has shown that it is more accurate to prescribe exercise as a percentage of the oxygen uptake reserve (VO2R), which is the difference between resting and maximal or peak oxygen consumption, rather than as a percentage of the VO2 max. Moreover, it appears that a minimum of 1600 kcal/week of leisure-time physical activity may halt the progression of coronary artery disease, whereas regression may be achieved with a gross energy expenditure of 2200 kcal/week. Upper body and resistance training have also been shown to be safe and effective for clinically stable patients. Aerobic capacity serves as an independent predictor of all cause and cardiovascular mortality in patients referred to an outpatient cardiac rehabilitation program, with each 1 metabolic equivalent increase in aerobic fitness conferring an approximate 10% reduction in mortality. The goal of preventing recurrent cardiac events is, to a large extent, based on sustained compliance to multifactorial interventions, which can be influenced by numerous socioeconomic and clinical variables, and enhanced by home-based or group cardiac rehabilitation programs that are designed to circumvent or attenuate barriers to participation and adherence, so that many more individuals may realize the benefits that secondary prevention can provide.Keywords
This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Is there a threshold intensity for aerobic training in cardiac patients?Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2002
- The relationship of heart rate reserve to &OV0312;O2 reserve in patients with heart diseaseMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2002
- &OV0312;O2 reserve and the minimal intensity for improving cardiorespiratory fitnessMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 2002
- Associations of Light, Moderate, and Vigorous Intensity Physical Activity with Longevity: The Harvard Alumni Health StudyAmerican Journal of Epidemiology, 2000
- Relationship between% heart rate reserve and%??VO2reserve in treadmill exerciseMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1998
- Heart rate reserve is equivalent to%??VO2Reserve, not to%??VO2maxMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1997
- Evidence of the Role of Physical Activity and Cardiorespiratory Fitness in the Prevention of Coronary Heart DiseaseQuest, 1995
- Physical Activity and Public HealthJAMA, 1995
- Various intensities of leisure time physical activity in patients with coronary artery disease: Effects on cardiorespiratory fitness and progression of coronary atherosclerotic lesionsJournal of the American College of Cardiology, 1993
- Improvement of left ventricular contractile function by exercise training in patients with coronary artery disease.Circulation, 1986