| Literature DB >> 33146351 |
Zhe Wang1, Xiaojing Hu1, Qingxiang Dai1.
Abstract
In recent years, frailty has attracted increasing attention from clinicians and health care workers. The influence of frailty on the elderly, especially those with chronic diseases of the respiratory system, is highly significant. Frailty is particularly more common in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Frailty and COPD share many risk factors and pathophysiological mechanisms. As a comprehensive interventional method for chronic respiratory diseases, pulmonary rehabilitation is an important basic measure for the management of patients with COPD. Frailty in these patients can be reversed using pulmonary rehabilitation by targeting five components of the frailty phenotype at the entry point. The present review discusses the benefits of pulmonary rehabilitation in patients with COPD complicated by frailty and provides a theoretical basis for pulmonary rehabilitation treatment in this population. In addition, the timing of pulmonary rehabilitation is also addressed, with the prefrail stage being the "golden" period. The implementation of pulmonary rehabilitation must vary among individuals, and individualized treatment strategies will help maximize benefits.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33146351 PMCID: PMC7561069 DOI: 10.6061/clinics/2020/e1778
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.365
Summary of studies investigating the effects of pulmonary rehabilitation on components of the frailty phenotype.
| First author, year (reference) | Study design | n | Pulmonary rehabilitation | Observation | Main result | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency | Duration | |||||
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| van de Bool, 2017 (28) | RCT, double-blind | 81 | 2-3/week | 4 months | Total body mass, BMI, FM, SMM | After PR, body composition results demonstrated significantly increased body mass, skeletal muscle mass, and fat mass in the control group |
| Gurgun, 2013 (72) | RCT, prospective | 46 | 2/week | 8 weeks | Weight, BMI, FFMI | Combining oral NS with PR in depleted COPD patients improved body composition |
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| Van Herck, 2019 (33) | Responder analyses | 446 | 5 days/week | 12 weeks | CIS subjective fatigue | After PR, the mean CIS-Fatigue score improved significantly and was clinically relevant |
| Gordon, 2019 (36) | Meta-analysis | 734 | 2-5/week | 4-16 weeks | HADS-A, HADS-D | PR conferred significant, clinically relevant benefits on anxiety and depression symptoms |
| Peters, 2017 (37) | Cluster analysis | 160 | 5 days/week | 12 weeks | CIS subjective fatigue | After PR, the mean CIS-Fatigue score significantly improved, and the improvement persisted one year later |
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| Iepsen, 2015 (49) | Meta-analysis | 331 | 2-3/week | 3-12 weeks | Muscle strength | A combination of resistance and endurance training increased leg muscle strength in COPD |
| Vonbank, 2012 (73) | RCT | 36 | 2/week | 12 weeks | Muscle strength | Muscle strength improved in all groups |
| Chen, 2016 (50) | Meta-analysis | 276 | 2-7/week | 4-10 weeks | Quadriceps strength | NMES appeared to be effective in enhancing quadricep strength in patients with moderate-to-severe COPD |
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| Li, 2019 (54) | Meta-analysis | 414 | 2-7/week | 2-12 months | 6WMT | PR programs had beneficial influence in exercise function in elderly COPD patients |
| Kon, 2014 (56) | Longitudinal | 301 | 2/week | 8 weeks | 4MGS | The 4MGS improved with PR |
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| Probst, 2006 (63) | RCT | 11 | 3/week | 12 weeks | 6WMT, Wmax | As expected, training Wmax increased significantly after 12 weeks of exercise |
| Vogiatzis, 2002 (62) | RCT | 36 | 40 min/day & 2 days/week | 12 weeks | PWR, CRDQ | Interval training elicited substantial training effects. |
| Nagai, 2018 (67) | Cross-sectional | 886 | - | - | SB, LPA, MVPA, FP | Replacing 30 min of SB with an equivalent amount of LPA decreases the risk for frailty in older adults. Moreover, increasing LPA appeared more feasible than increasing MVPA in older adults, with substantial benefit |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CIS, Checklist Individual Strength; COPD, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CRDQ: Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire; FM, fat mass; FP, frailty phenotype; HADS-A, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Anxiety; HADS-D, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-Depression; LPA, light-intensity physical activity; MVPA, moderate-to-vigorous intensity physical activity; NMES, neuromuscular electrical stimulation; NS, nutritional supplementation; PR, pulmonary rehabilitation; RCT, randomized clinical trial; SB: sedentary behavior; SMM, skeletal muscle mass; Wmax: baseline maximal workload; WR: peak work-rate; 4MGS, 4-meter gait speed; 6MWT, 6-min walk test.