| Literature DB >> 27940954 |
Carlo Vigorito1, Ana Abreu2, Marco Ambrosetti3, Romualdo Belardinelli4, Ugo Corrà5, Margaret Cupples6, Constantinos H Davos7, Stefan Hoefer8, Marie-Christine Iliou9, Jean-Paul Schmid10, Heinz Voeller11, Patrick Doherty12.
Abstract
Frailty is a geriatric syndrome characterised by a vulnerability status associated with declining function of multiple physiological systems and loss of physiological reserves. Two main models of frailty have been advanced: the phenotypic model (primary frailty) or deficits accumulation model (secondary frailty), and different instruments have been proposed and validated to measure frailty. However measured, frailty correlates to medical outcomes in the elderly, and has been shown to have prognostic value for patients in different clinical settings, such as in patients with coronary artery disease, after cardiac surgery or transvalvular aortic valve replacement, in patients with chronic heart failure or after left ventricular assist device implantation. The prevalence, clinical and prognostic relevance of frailty in a cardiac rehabilitation setting has not yet been well characterised, despite the increasing frequency of elderly patients in cardiac rehabilitation, where frailty is likely to influence the onset, type and intensity of the exercise training programme and the design of tailored rehabilitative interventions for these patients. Therefore, we need to start looking for frailty in elderly patients entering cardiac rehabilitation programmes and become more familiar with some of the tools to recognise and evaluate the severity of this condition. Furthermore, we need to better understand whether exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation may change the course and the prognosis of frailty in cardiovascular patients.Entities:
Keywords: Frailty; cardiac rehabilitation; elderly
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27940954 DOI: 10.1177/2047487316682579
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Prev Cardiol ISSN: 2047-4873 Impact factor: 7.804