| Literature DB >> 31266461 |
Katharina G Eckert1, Isabelle Abbasi-Neureither2, Maximilian Köppel3, Gerhard Huber4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD) also suffer from a wide range of additional disorders, which may be caused by the disease, the side effect of the medication, or a lack of physical activity (PA). This results in reduced physical and psychological wellbeing. However, as known from other chronic diseases exercise could be utilized as supportive therapy for IBD patients. Main goals of this article are (a) collecting data of the effects structured physical activity interventions have on validated clinical parameters of IBD and health related symptoms, (b) developing activity recommendations for this clientele.Entities:
Keywords: Disease activity; Disease management; Inflammatory bowel disease; Physical activity intervention
Year: 2019 PMID: 31266461 PMCID: PMC6604412 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-019-1034-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Flow diagram of literature search and study selection
Reasons for exclusion of full-text articles
| Reason for exclusion | Number of articles excluded |
|---|---|
| No PA intervention | |
| No IBD patients | |
| Study protocol | |
| Use of same study sample | |
| Reviews / no Interventions | |
| Total number of articles excluded after full text screening |
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Qualitative synthesis of studies examining the effects of structured exercise interventions in patients with IBD
| Author | Subjects and design | Endpoints | Medication EG (CG) | Methods | Duration and frequency | Main findings | Adverse events | Level of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Robinson et al., [ | 107 patients with CD, mild to moderate disease activity; block randomization (EG: n=53, CG: n=54) | BMD | All under steroid use | Home-based; floor-based, progressive low-impact dynamic resistance training | At least twice a week, with a min. of 10 sessions per month; 1 year | Fully compliant patients (14): BMD increased at the femoral neck (n.s.), the spine (n.s.), the Ward’s triangle (n.s.) and the trochanter major ([EG-CG] (95% CI) = 4.67 (0.86-8.48), p=.02) | Not reported | 2 |
| D’Inca et al., [ | 6 CD patients in remission; 6 healthy controls | Disease activity, various gastrointestinal parameters | Not reported | Cycling exercise | Cycle ergometer exercise at 60% of max. oxygen intake; once for 1 hour | No statistically significant effects on gastrointestinal parameters; no change in disease activity | None | 3 |
| Loudon et al., [ | 12 physically inactive patients with inactive or mildly active CD, no controls | Stress Index, HrQoL, disease activity, fitness, BMI | Prednisone n=4; 5-ASA n=5; 6-MP n=6; no medication n=2 | Supervised and unsupervised walking program (indoor track) | 3 sessions a week (20-35 min); 12 weeks | Significant improvements in IBD Stress Index (mean change study outset (29.2±15.4) to completion (19.5±10.8) p<.001), IBDQ (172±27 to 189±12, p=.01), HBI (5.9±5.0 to 3.6±3.1, p=.02), VO2max (30.6±4.7 to 32.4±4.8, p<.01), BMI (24.3±5.3 to 23.9±5.3, p=0.07) | None | 4 |
| Candow et al., [ | 12 CD patients, no controls; disease activity not specified | Disease activity, muscle strength | Not reported | Supervised resistance training (12 exercises) | 3 times a week over the course of 12 weeks, 3 sets, 8-10 repetitions; 60-70% of 1RM | Significant increase in muscle strength (p<.05); no change in disease activity (HBI) | None | 4 |
| Elsenbruch et al., [ | 30 UC patients in remission or low disease activity; randomized controlled trial | Neuroendocrine and cellular immune parameters, HrQoL, disease activity | 5-ASA n=8 (7); probiotics n=1 (3); ironsulfate n=0 (1) no medication n=6 (4) | Structured and supervised mind-body therapy (includes stress management training, moderate exercise, Mediterranean diet, cognitive behavioral techniques with focus on self-care strategies) | 60-hour program over a 10-week period (i.e. 6 h on 1 day every week) | Significant improvements in HrQoL (SF-36 short: psychosocial health sum score p<.05, mean change EG=7.2±10.7; mean change CG = 0.0±8.5) and IBDQ (bowel symptoms: d=0.52, p<.01); no statistically significant group differences in lymphocyte sub-set numbers or production of TNF α and RI | Not reported | 2 |
| Gupta et al., [ | 175 patients with different chronic conditions (n=18 with gastrointestinal problems including CD, disease activity not specified) | Anxiety scores | Not specified | Lifestyle intervention | Yoga, breathing exercise, mediation, stress management and nutrition education; 5+3 days with a two day break for weekend | No statistically significant change in anxiety levels (STAI) | Not reported | 4 |
| Ng et al., [ | 32 patients in remission or with mildly active CD, matched and randomized | HrQoL, disease activity, Stress Index | 5-ASA n=6 (6); no medication n=10 (10) | Independant walking program | 60% HRmax during exercise, 3 times a week over 3 month; 30 min per session | Significant improvements in IDB Stress Index (p<.05), disease related dysfunction (IBDQ) (p<.05) and reduction in HBI (p<.01) | None | 2 |
| De Souza Tajiri et al., [ | 19 patients (CD: n=10, UC: n=9), no controls; disease activity not specified | Thigh circumference, bodyweight, quadriceps strength, HrQoL | Not reported | Progressive resistance training | Knee extension; first 4 weeks: 50% 1RM, 3 sets of 12 repetitions; last 4 weeks: weekly increase of load by 10% until 80% of max. load | Significant improvements in quadriceps strength (greater than 40%, p<.001), IBDQ (mean changes baseline 156.3±29.0 to post 180.5±24.2, p<.001). No statistically significant changes in thigh circumference and bodyweight | None | 4 |
| Gerbarg et al., [ | 25 patients with mild to moderate IBD, randomized | Psychological and physical symptoms (HrQoL), inflammatory markers | No medication n=5; all other mixed medications (biologics, immunosuppressive; corticosteroids; mesalamines) | EG: 9 hours administered Breath-Body-Mind Workshop (BBMW) (breathing, Qigong, mediation) CG: 9 hours educational seminar (ES) (information about IBD and its treatment) | EG: BBMW and 26 weeks homebased, self-administered sessions, every day for 20 min | No between group differences IBDQ (mean change EG= 12.57±15.85, mean change CG= -1.73±19.91; p=.08); Significant changes in CRP (median change EG: baseline 1026.0 to post 730.0; p=.01; median change CG: 8590.0 to 7180.0, p=.39) but not in FCP (median change EG: baseline 216.3 to post 155.9, p=.78; median change CG: 157.8 to 341.5, p=.59), | None | 2 |
| Klare et al., [ | 30 patients with mild to moderate IBD, randomized controlled trial | HrQoL, disease activity, BMI | Prednisolone n=4 (1); budesonide n=3 (2); mesalazine n=3 (5); ASA/5-MP n=3 (5) | Supervised outdoor running program for untrained people | Moderate intensity, equated by BMI; 3 times a week for 10 weeks | Significant improvements of IBDQ social dimension ([EG-CG] (95% CI) = 4.4 (0.6-8.2), p=.03); no changes in disease activity (CDAI: [EG-CD] (95% CI) = -3.7 (-35.8-29.3, p=.81; RI: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = -0.2 (-2,6-2.3), p=.88); BMI ([EG-CG] (95% CI) = 0.4 (0.0-0.9), p=.08) or laboratory results (Lc: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = -0.7(-2.3-0.9), p=.39; CRP: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = 0.0 (-0.3-0.2), p=.88; FCP: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = -25.3 (-433.6-383.0), p=.90 | None | 2 |
| Sharma et al., [ | 87 patients (CD: n=36, UC: n=51) in clinical remission, randomly allocated to EG or CG | Stress Index, anxiety, cardiovascular autonomic functions, immune markers | “all treated with maintenance dose of mesalamines and azathriopine” (p.103) | Supervised Yoga intervention (physical postures, pranayama, meditation) | 1 hour a day for 8 weeks | No statistically significant group differences in any outcome parameter (overall), but significant differences within the UC groups (EG and CG) in State (mean change baseline from 38.9±8.9 to post 32.8±8.2, p=.01) and Trait (mean change from 49.5±8.7 to 41.2±8.2, p=.001) anxiety levels (STAI); fewer UC patients reported arthralgia (p<.05) | Not reported | 2 |
| Hassid et al., [ | 10 patients (CD n=7, UC n=3), no controls; disease activity not specified | Disease activity | Not reported | Different types of intensive exercise: marathon (1), half-marathon (5), long bicycle ride (>45 miles) (3), triathlon (1) | Once | No statistically significant change in disease activity (HBI and SCCAI); no abnormally elevated FCP | None | 4 |
| Cramer et al., [ | 77 UC patients, randomly assigned; in remission | HrQoL, disease activity | Biologics n=4 (6); immunosuppressive n=0 (1); thiopurines n=10 (10); mesalazine n=30 (28); probiotics n=5 (1) | Supervised traditional hatha yoga intervention (EG); two self-care books - without instructions for using - providing general information on UC (CG) | 90 min weekly over a period of 12 weeks | Significant increase of HrQoL after 12 weeks (IBDQ: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = 14.7 (2.4-26.9), p=.02) and after 24 weeks ([EG-CG] (95% CI) = 16.4 (2.5-30.3), p=.02); disease activity (RI: [EG-CG] (95% CI) = -1.2 (-0.1-[-2.3]), p=.03) | None | 2 |
5-ASA: 5-Aminosalicylic Acid; 6-MP: 6-Mercatopurine; BMD: Bone mineral density; BMI: body mass index; BBMW: Breath-Body-Mind Workshop; CD: Crohn’s Disease; CDAI: Crohn’s Disease Activity Index; CG: Control Group; EG: Experimental Group; FCP: fecal calprotectin; HBI: Harvey and Bradshaw Index; HrQoL: Health related Quality of Life; IBD: Inflammatory Bowel Disease; IBDQ: Inflammatory Bowel Disease Questionnaire; Lc: Leucocyte count; min: minutes; n.s.: not significant; 1RM: One-Repetition-Maximum; RI: Rachmilewitz Index; SCCAI: Simple Clinical Colitis Activity index; STAI: State and Trait Anxiety Inventory; UC: Ulcerative Colitis
Fig. 2Possible clinical, physical and psychological effects of PA in IB
Physical activity recommendations for patients with mild-to-moderate IBD
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| F-requency | ...engage in moderate PA at least three times a week, even better five times a week. |
| I-ntensity | ... choose an activity which increases the energy expenditure by at least a factor of three or four, as it is the case for brisk walking. For exercise control via heart rate (HR), the intensity of the exercise should be between 60 – 80% of the maximum HR. Bear in mind: moderate intensity is key in order to improve inflammation. |
| T-ime | … exercise for at least 30 minutes per day (more is even better, if tolerated). |
| T-ype | ... engage in an enjoyable activity, to increase the probability to maintain this behavior. Exercising in groups can increase the motivation. A mixture of endurance and resistance exercise is favorable, because it avoids unilateral training and emphasizes the use of all big muscle groups. ... increase the amount of leisure time PA. “Walk before you run”. |