医学
心肺适能
高强度间歇训练
间歇训练
物理疗法
运动处方
冠状动脉疾病
最大VO2
随机对照试验
心脏病学
置信区间
康复
内科学
心率
血压
作者
G. McGregor,Richard D. Powell,Brian Begg,Stefan T Birkett,Simon Nichols,Stuart Ennis,Scott McGuire,Jonathon Prosser,Olivier Fiassam,Siew Wan Hee,Thomas Hamborg,Prithwish Banerjee,Ned Hartfiel,Joanna M Charles,Rhiannon Tudor Edwards,Aimee L. Drane,Danish Ali,Faizel Osman,Hejie He,Tom Lachlan,Mark J. Haykowsky,Lee Ingle,Rob Shave
标识
DOI:10.1093/eurjpc/zwad039
摘要
Abstract Background There is a lack of international consensus regarding the prescription of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) for people with coronary artery disease (CAD) attending cardiac rehabilitation (CR). Aims To assess the clinical effectiveness and safety of low-volume HIIT compared with moderate-intensity steady-state (MISS) exercise training for people with CAD. Methods and results We conducted a multi-centre RCT, recruiting 382 patients from 6 outpatient CR centres. Participants were randomized to twice-weekly HIIT (n = 187) or MISS (n = 195) for 8 weeks. HIIT consisted of 10 × 1 min intervals of vigorous exercise (>85% maximum capacity) interspersed with 1 min periods of recovery. MISS was 20–40 min of moderate-intensity continuous exercise (60–80% maximum capacity). The primary outcome was the change in cardiorespiratory fitness [peak oxygen uptake (VO2 peak)] at 8 week follow-up. Secondary outcomes included cardiovascular disease risk markers, cardiac structure and function, adverse events, and health-related quality of life. At 8 weeks, VO2peak improved more with HIIT (2.37 mL.kg−1.min−1; SD, 3.11) compared with MISS (1.32 mL.kg−1.min−1; SD, 2.66). After adjusting for age, sex, and study site, the difference between arms was 1.04 mL.kg−1.min−1 (95% CI, 0.38 to 1.69; P = 0.002). Only one serious adverse event was possibly related to HIIT. Conclusions In stable CAD, low-volume HIIT improved cardiorespiratory fitness more than MISS by a clinically meaningful margin. Low-volume HIIT is a safe, well-tolerated, and clinically effective intervention that produces short-term improvement in cardiorespiratory fitness. It should be considered by all CR programmes as an adjunct or alternative to MISS. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT02784873. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02784873.
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