| Literature DB >> 24348732 |
Ching Lan1, Ssu-Yuan Chen1, May-Kuen Wong2, Jin Shin Lai1.
Abstract
Exercise training is the cornerstone of rehabilitation for patients with cardiovascular disease (CVD). Although high-intensity exercise has significant cardiovascular benefits, light-to-moderate intensity aerobic exercise also offers health benefits. With lower-intensity workouts, patients may be able to exercise for longer periods of time and increase the acceptance of exercise, particularly in unfit and elderly patients. Tai Chi Chuan (Tai Chi) is a traditional Chinese mind-body exercise. The exercise intensity of Tai Chi is light to moderate, depending on its training style, posture, and duration. Previous research has shown that Tai Chi enhances aerobic capacity, muscular strength, balance, and psychological well-being. Additionally, Tai Chi training has significant benefits for common cardiovascular risk factors, such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, dyslipidemia, poor exercise capacity, endothelial dysfunction, and depression. Tai Chi is safe and effective in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI), coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) surgery, congestive heart failure (HF), and stroke. In conclusion, Tai Chi has significant benefits to patients with cardiovascular disease, and it may be prescribed as an alternative exercise program for selected patients with CVD.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24348732 PMCID: PMC3855938 DOI: 10.1155/2013/983208
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Effect of Tai Chi in patients with heart failure.
| Author | Design | Patients | Intervention | Outcomes |
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| Yeh et al. (2004) [ | RCT | 30 patients with HF | Tai Chi group ( | Tai Chi group showed improved quality of life scores, increased 6-min walking distance, and decreased serum B-type natriuretic peptide levels compared with patients in the control group |
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| Barrow et al. (2007) [ | RCT | 52 patients with HF | Tai Chi group ( | Tai Chi group had an improvement in symptom scores of heart failure and depression scores compared with those patients in the control group |
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| Yeh et al. (2008) [ | RCT | 18 patients with HF | Tai Chi group ( | ECG-based sleep spectrogram showed that Tai Chi group had a significant increase in high-frequency coupling and significant reduction in low-frequency coupling, which indicated improved sleep stability and better disease-specific quality of life |
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| Yeh et al. (2011) [ | RCT | 100 patients with systolic HF | Tai Chi group ( | No significant changes in 6-minute walking distance and peak oxygen uptake |
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| Caminiti et al. (2011) [ | RCT | 60 HF patients | Combined training group (CT, | 6-minute walking increased in both groups |
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| Yeh et al. (2013) [ | RCT | 16 HF patients with preserved ejection fraction | Tai Chi group ( | Change in peak oxygen uptake was similar between groups |
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| Redwine et al. (2012) [ | Non-RCT | 28 HF patients | Tai Chi group ( | Tai Chi group reduced total depression scores and somatic/affective symptoms of depression compared to usual care patients |
Effect of Tai Chi in patients with stroke.
| Author | Design | Patients | Intervention | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hart et al. (2004) [ | RCT | 18 men | Tai Chi group ( | Tai Chi group improved in general functioning and social functioning but did not exhibit changes in balance or speed of walking |
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| Au-Yeung et al. (2009) [ | RCT | 136 men | Tai Chi group ( | Tai Chi group showed greater COG excursion amplitude in leaning forward, backward, and toward the affected and nonaffected sides as well as faster reaction time in moving the COG toward the nonaffected side |
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| Wang et al. (2010) [ | RCT | 34 elderly patients after stroke | Tai Chi group ( | No significant effects of interaction between group and time in the time courses of P300 amplitudes and latencies |
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Taylor-Piliae and Coull (2012) [ | RCT | 28 subjects aged 69 ± 11 years | Tai Chi group ( | No falls or other adverse events |