| Literature DB >> 31535221 |
Barbara Wagner1, Axel Seuser2, Steffen Krüger3, Marie Luca Herzig3, Thomas Hilberg3, Cihan Ay4, Timothy Hasenöhrl1, Richard Crevenna5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hemophilia is a congenital bleeding disorder with an estimated frequency of 1:10,000 births. Repeated joint bleeding is a hallmark of the disorder and leads to painful hemophilic arthropathy. Regular exercise can help improve joint stability and function, reduce the risk of injury and bleeding and improve physical fitness and quality of life. This method paper describes an online training concept aiming to offer access to appropriate exercise instructions for people with hemophilia who are not able to attend regular training at a hemophilia center.Entities:
Keywords: Exercise; Haemophilia; Hemophilia; Home-based; Rehabilitation; Training
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31535221 PMCID: PMC6851214 DOI: 10.1007/s00508-019-01548-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Wien Klin Wochenschr ISSN: 0043-5325 Impact factor: 1.704
Overview of the exercise program
| Warm up and mobilization | Coordination exercises | Strengthening exercises for: | Flexibility exercises for: | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adults | Warm up and mobilization for ankles, knees, hips, spine, shoulders, elbows, wrists (sitting and standing position) | Standing with feet in narrow position; standing and walking in tandem position (increased difficulty: including the use of a ball); one leg stand (increased difficulty: including the use of a ball); one leg stand—performing movements like a “8” with the other leg | Back muscles, abdominals, abductors, adductors, quadriceps, tibialis anterior, calves, triceps/pectoralis/muscles of the shoulder | Iliopsoas, hamstrings, calves, quadriceps, pectoralis muscles/ventral muscles of the shoulder |
| Children, adolescents | Short program for the whole body while standing/walking on the same spot | One leg stand (increased difficulty: as described above); diagonal standing scale | Back muscles, abdominals, abductors, quadriceps, tibialis anterior, calves, triceps/pectoralis/muscles of the shoulder | Iliopsoas, hamstrings, calves, quadriceps, pectoralis muscles/ventral muscles of the shoulder |
General recommendations regarding the exercise composition
| Motor skill | Adults | Children, adolescents |
|---|---|---|
| Warm up, mobilization | ≥10 min | Approx. 5 min |
| Coordination | 1–2 coordination exercises | 2 coordination exercises |
| Strengthening | 2–3 strengthening exercises – chronic affection of knee: quadriceps (+ hip abductors, possibly with tibialis anterior) – chronic affection of ankle: tibialis anterior (+ quadriceps, possibly with calves) – chronic affection of elbow: triceps follow that scheme for 6–8 weeks, then keep focus on main muscle (quadriceps for knee, tibialis anterior for ankle, triceps for elbow) and vary by adding 1–2 other muscle groups for 6–8 weeks | 2 strengthening exercises – 1 for abdominals – 1 for hip abductors – possibly: with back muscles follow that scheme for 6–8 weeks, then keep focus on abdominals and hip abductors and add exercises for the back muscles (quadriceps, tibialis anterior) for another 6–8 weeks |
| Flexibility | 2 flexibility exercises – chronic knee affection: include stretching for hamstrings – chronic ankle affection: include stretching for calves | 2 flexibility exercises – 1 for hamstrings – 1 for calves – if time: add 1 for iliopsoas |