Literature DB >> 25382764

Climbing therapy under PK-tailored prophylaxis.

M Stemberger1, E Schmit, D Czepa, K Kurnik, M Spannagl.   

Abstract

UNLABELLED: Climbing has a low risk of injury and strengthens the entire musculature. Due to its benefits in physical and mental health as well as its high fun factor climbing is an established way of therapy. So far, the usefulness of climbing therapy has not been shown for people with haemophilia (PWH). A crucial requirement for physical activity in PWH is regular prophylaxis. As the patient's individual pharmacokinetic (PK) response varies significantly, PK-tailored prophylaxis may decrease bleeding frequency. CASE REPORT: We describe a man (age 25 years) with severe haemophilia A who took part in an 8.5-month weekly climbing program under PK-tailored prophylaxis. Bleeding frequency, factor consumption, joint health (Haemophilia Joint Health Score, HJHS), quality of life (Haemo-QoL-A) and climbing performance (UIAA scale) were assessed before and after the training. Prior to the study, the patient was on demand treatment. The patient was started on standard prophylaxis for a 2 months period and then observed for 6.5 months under PK-tailored prophylaxis. PK-tailored prophylaxis was targeted to a trough level of 1-3%. For high-impact activities a factor activity >15%, for low-impact activities a factor activity >5% was suggested.
RESULTS: Climbing therapy was safe. The bleeding rate decreased from 14 (2012) to 1 (during the study period of 8.5 months). The one bleeding event was due to a missed infusion and was not triggered by physical activity. The elimination half-life using Bayesian statistics was determined to be 16h. Using this half-life for PK-tailored prophylaxis reduced the factor VIII consumption in comparison to standard prophylaxis. Joint health was particularly improved in the categories range of motion and swelling. Quality of life scores stayed at a high level. Climbing performance improved by 1 grade.
CONCLUSION: The combination of PK-tailored prophylaxis with therapeutic climbing improved clinical outcome in this young adult with severe haemophilia. The tailored concept for high- and low-impact activities appeared to be safe.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Haemophilia A; PK-tailored prophylaxis; climbing therapy

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25382764     DOI: 10.5482/HAMO-14-01-0003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Hamostaseologie        ISSN: 0720-9355            Impact factor:   1.778


  4 in total

1.  [DreKiP - an outpatient treatment program for children and adolescents with headache].

Authors:  M Richter; E Gruhl; E Lautenschläger; T Müller; F Schumann; D Skiera; A Theisinger; U Zimmer; R Berner; M von der Hagen; R Sabatowski; A Hähner; G Gossrau
Journal:  Schmerz       Date:  2018-02       Impact factor: 1.107

2.  Long-term effects of bouldering psychotherapy on depression: benefits can be maintained across a 12-month follow-up.

Authors:  Laura Schwarz; Lisa Dorscht; Stephanie Book; Eva-Maria Stelzer; Johannes Kornhuber; Katharina Luttenberger
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2019-12-07

3.  Functional improvement in children and adolescents with primary headache after an interdisciplinary multimodal therapy program: the DreKiP study.

Authors:  Hanna Sobe; Matthias Richter; Reinhard Berner; Maja von der Hagen; Antje Hähner; Ingo Röder; Thea Koch; Rainer Sabatowski; Anna Klimova; Gudrun Gossrau
Journal:  J Headache Pain       Date:  2022-08-25       Impact factor: 8.588

Review 4.  The Origin, Application and Mechanism of Therapeutic Climbing: A Narrative Review.

Authors:  Sheng Liu; Xiaoqin Gong; Hanping Li; Yuan Li
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2022-08-06       Impact factor: 4.614

  4 in total

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