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A 3-Min Recumbent Stepper Test in Chronic Stroke

Authors :
Daniel L. Carl
Dustyn Whitesel
Colleen Meyrose
Jennifer Westover
Jane Khoury
Myron Gerson
Brett Kissela
Kari Dunning
Pierce Boyne
Source :
PMR : the journal of injury, function, and rehabilitation.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Persons with stroke often have difficulty achieving target heart rate during graded exercise testing (GXT), which is known to limit test sensitivity for detecting clinically relevant cardiac conditions. A novel Recumbent Stepper 3-minute (RS 3Min) 'all out' test may increase sensitivity of stress testing after stroke.The purpose of this study was to determine the feasibility of adding a Recumbent Stepper 3Min test after a GXT among persons' post-stroke.A within-subject, non-randomized, repeated measures design.Rehabilitation research laboratory and cardiovascular stress laboratory PARTICIPANTS: Fifteen participants with chronic stroke (56.7 ± 9.6 years; 6.4 ± 4.3 years post stroke; 8 male).All participants randomly completed 1) a symptom-limited treadmill GXT; and 2) a symptom-limited RS GXT followed by a RS 3Min critical power test.Heart rate, ratings of perceived exertion, oxygen consumption, respiratory exchange ratio, and power output measured continuously during each test. Blood pressure measured every two minutes and or immediately post exercise. P value set at p0.05 from omnibus test for a significant difference among protocols.The RS 3Min test had a significantly higher rate of achieving target HR compared to the RS GXT (9/14 vs 4/14, p=0.02) and was not significantly different from the TM GXT (9/14 vs 5/14, p=0.09). Minimum power output during the RS 3Min was significantly higher than peak power output during the RS GXT (110 ± 41 W vs. 84 ± 22 W, p=0.02) with 12/15 subjects reaching a VO2 plateau.While additional studies with randomized designs are needed, a novel RS 3Min 'all out' test appears to be a promising method for enhancing test sensitivity in cardiovascular screening post-stroke, while providing a potentially valid measure of critical power. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Details

ISSN :
19341563
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PMR : the journal of injury, function, and rehabilitation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....89f891947fae5e483b40b1a35f827ea3