| Literature DB >> 33262892 |
Amy E Harwood1,2, Sean Pymer3, Lee Ingle4, Patrick Doherty5, Ian C Chetter3, Belinda Parmenter6, Christopher D Askew7,8, Gary A Tew9.
Abstract
Peripheral artery disease (PAD) is caused by atherosclerotic narrowing of the arteries supplying the lower limbs often resulting in intermittent claudication, evident as pain or cramping while walking. Supervised exercise training elicits clinically meaningful benefits in walking ability and quality of life. Walking is the modality of exercise with the strongest evidence and is recommended in several national and international guidelines. Alternate forms of exercise such as upper- or lower-body cycling may be used, if required by certain patients, although there is less evidence for these types of programmes. The evidence for progressive resistance training is growing and patients can also engage in strength-based training alongside a walking programme. For those unable to attend a supervised class (strongest evidence), home-based or 'self-facilitated' exercise programmes are known to improve walking distance when compared to simple advice. All exercise programmes, independent of the mode of delivery, should be progressive and individually prescribed where possible, considering disease severity, comorbidities and initial exercise capacity. All patients should aim to accumulate at least 30 min of aerobic activity, at least three times a week, for at least 3 months, ideally in the form of walking exercise to near-maximal claudication pain. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular; Exercise physiology; Review
Year: 2020 PMID: 33262892 PMCID: PMC7673109 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsem-2020-000897
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med ISSN: 2055-7647
Figure 1Intermittent claudication due to peripheral artery disease. Reproduced from Morlet et al[3] with permission from BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Note: Iliac or femoral artery disease can cause symptoms at multiple distal muscle sites.
Vascular surgery guideline recommendations for exercise
| Recommendation | Frequency | Intensity | Type | Time | Duration | Progression | Supervision | Location | Supplementary exercises |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guideline | |||||||||
| TASC II, 2007[ | 3 × per week (typically) | Speed and grade that induces claudication within 3–5 min | Intermittent treadmill walking | 30 min increasing up to 60 min | Not reported | Increase speed/grade if patient can walk for more than 10 min | Not reported | Not reported | Not reported |
| AHA/ACC, 2016[ | 3 × per week | Maximum–moderate claudication | Intermittent walking | 30–45 min per session, with warm up and cool down | Minimum of 12 weeks | Not reported | Supervised by a qualified healthcare professional | Hospital/outpatient facility | Not reported |
| ECS, 2017[ | Not reported | Not reported | Walking | Minimum 3 hours/week | At least 3 months | Not reported | Supervised | Not reported | Cycling, strength training and upper-arm ergometry |
| NICE 1472018[ | Not reported | Maximal pain | Walking | 2 hours/week | 3 months | Not reported | Supervised | Not reported | Not reported |
| RACGP, 2013[ | 3–5 × p/w | Pain | Intermittent walking | 30 min increasing to 60 min | Not reported | Not reported | Supervised | Not reported | Not reported |
ACC; AHA; ECS; NICE; RACGP; TASC.
Summary of exercise prescription recommendations
| Exercise rationale | To improve walking capacity, claudication symptoms and quality of life, and for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease |
|---|---|
|
|
|
|
| The exercise should ideally be delivered through an on-site supervised programme. The exercise prescription should be individually tailored based on an initial assessment; however, several patients may be supervised at the same time. A facilitated, self-managed exercise programme with embedded behaviour change techniques is a reasonable alternative for people who prefer this approach or are unable to access an on-site programme, or for longer-term benefit after a supervised programme is completed. Details of a structured education programme that promotes self-managed walking exercise can be found here.[ |
|
| On-site programmes can be delivered in various settings including hospital- or community-based exercise physiology or physiotherapy clinics or community exercise facilities. Self-managed programmes can be conducted in a setting that suits the individual. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| May be considered as alternative aerobic exercise strategies for improving walking ability and quality of life. May also have the potential to provide a greater cardiorespiratory stimulus than walking exercise in individuals with severe claudication. |
|
| Though evidence is increasing, resistance exercise is yet to be included in international guidelines as a sole therapy, it is purely recommended as an adjunct for now. It therefore should be considered as complementary (eg, for targeting improved strength or reduced falls risk), but not as a replacement for aerobic exercise because its impact on walking ability appears modest at best. |
|
| Circuit-based training may be a practical way of delivering a combination of aerobic and resistance exercises when circumstances necessitate group-based training and is an effective tool for improving both muscle strength and cardiorespiratory fitness, which are both related to reduced cardiovascular and all-cause mortality.[ |
|
| An initial risk assessment should occur as per Appendix E of the following ACPICR Standards document |
ACPICR; BACPR; IC; RPE; SE-36, Short-Form-36; VascuQoL; WELCH.