| Literature DB >> 30519032 |
Sinann Al Najem1,2, Andreas Groll3,4, Axel Schmermund5,6, Bernd Nowak5,6, Thomas Voigtländer5,6, Ulrike Kaltenbach5, Peter Dohmann5, Dietrich Andresen7, Jürgen Scharhag2,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A total of 6,500 to 8,000 steps per day are recommended for cardiovascular secondary prevention. The aim of this research was to examine how many steps per day patients achieve during ambulant cardiac rehabilitation (CR), and if there is a correlation between the number of steps and physical and cardiological parameters.Entities:
Keywords: Step recommendation; pedometer; steps/day in cardiac patients
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30519032 PMCID: PMC6235325 DOI: 10.2147/VHRM.S179798
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vasc Health Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6344
Patient group description (variable means together with their empirical SDs)
| n | Steps/day | Working capacity | Age, years | BMI | Days in CRP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total | 192 | 6,530±2,504 | 1.5±0.46 | 59±11 | 28.49±4.85 | 24±5 |
| Male | 160 | 6,584±2,534 | 1.56±0.45 | 59±11 | 28.49±4.54 | 24±5 |
| Female | 32 | 6,257±2,365 | 1.23±0.37 | 58±10 | 28.5±6.24 | 26±4 |
| NYHA1 | 139 | 6,817±2,598 | 1.62±0.43 | 58±10 | 27.89±4.51 | 24±5 |
| NYHA2 | 43 | 5,977±2,115 | 1.23±0.35 | 60±13 | 29.09±5.01 | 25±4 |
| NYHA3 | 10 | 4,917±1,741 | 0.97±0.3 | 57±11 | 34.3±4.86 | 28±5 |
| EF1 | 149 | 6,699±2,438 | 1.52±0.43 | 58±11 | 28.62±4.92 | 24±5 |
| EF2 | 28 | 6,374±2,994 | 1.56±0.54 | 62±10 | 27.5±3.84 | 24±4 |
| EF3 | 12 | 5,015±1,910 | 1.17±0.47 | 62±13 | 29.42±6.2 | 27±5 |
| EF4 | 3 | 5,638±667 | 1.21±0.42 | 62±12 | 27.67±4.04 | 23±4 |
| No coronary artery disease | 18 | 6,613±2,034 | 1.48±0.41 | 51±14 | 28.94±5.12 | 26±4 |
| Coronary artery disease 1 | 67 | 6,914±2,587 | 1.58±0.46 | 58±11 | 28.12±5.62 | 24±4 |
| Coronary artery disease 2 | 65 | 6,649±2,702 | 1.54±0.42 | 60±10 | 28.71±4.38 | 24±5 |
| Coronary artery disease 3 | 42 | 5,697±2,085 | 1.32±0.5 | 62±10 | 28.57±4.16 | 25±5 |
| Normal weight: BMI 18.5–24 | 33 | 7,427±2,730 | 1.74±0.45 | 56±13 | 23±4 | |
| Overweight: BMI 25–29 | 98 | 6,448±2,393 | 1.59±0.43 | 62±10 | 24±5 | |
| Moderate obesity: BMI 30–34 | 36 | 6,751±2,393 | 1.34±0.36 | 55±10 | 25±5 | |
| Severe obesity: BMI 35–39 | 20 | 5,163±2,574 | 1.05±0.31 | 58±8 | 26±5 | |
| Very severe obesity: BMI >40 | 5 | 6,077±1,567 | 1.05±0.14 | 45±8 | 27±4 |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; EF, ejection fraction; NYHA, New York Heart Association.
Estimated coefficients of the linear regression effects on steps/day obtained by an additive model with a nonlinear effect for BMI
| Parametric coefficients | Estimate | Standard error | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 5,800.69 | 1,512.51 | 3.835 | 0.000173 |
| Age, years | –49.94 | 15.81 | –3.185 | 0.001863 |
| Smoker | –986.17 | 484.13 | –2.037 | 0.043113 |
| Ex-smoker | –1,125.36 | 344.97 | –3.262 | 0.001322 |
| HDL | 15.47 | 12.09 | 1.280 | 0.202176 |
| Wmax/kg bodyweight | 2,623.7 | 397.43 | 6.602 | 4.41e–10 |
| Beta-blocker medication | –277.7 | 316.82 | –0.877 | 0.381913 |
Note:
P-value<0.05,
P-value<0.01, and
P-value<0.001.
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; W, watt.
Figure 1Optimal penalty parameter λ has been determined via 10-fold cross-validation.
Figure 2Coefficient paths vs the penalty parameter λ (dashed vertical line: optimal penalty parameter l).
Figure 3Nonlinear effect of BMI on step outcome.
Abbreviation: BMI, body mass index.