In cardiac rehabilitation, 40-60-min exercise training sessions are advised. However, because of the increasing coronary artery disease (CAD) prevalence and higher workload for cardiac rehabilitation centres, it remains unclear whether 40-min exercise training sessions are equally effective as 60-min exercise training sessions. Prospective randomized clinical trial. One hundred and thirty-four CAD patients were included in a 7-week rehabilitation programme. All patients exercised 3 days per week, at a heart rate corresponding to 65% of baseline peak oxygen uptake ( V O2peak). Patients were randomized in two groups: 40 versus 60-min exercise training sessions. Changes of body anthropometrics, resting haemodynamics, exercise capacity and ventilatory threshold, blood plasma lipid profile and C-reactive protein level were assessed. As a result of rehabilitation, exercise capacity, ventilatory threshold, and blood plasma lipid profile improved significantly in the total population ( P < 0.05), without differences between subgroups ( P > 0.05). Body weight and waist circumference decreased significantly in total population ( P < 0.01), but with a greater magnitude in the 40 versus 60-min exercise session group ( P < 0.05). In the early rehabilitation of CAD patients, 40-min exercise training sessions seem to be at least as effective for improving body anthropometrics, blood plasma lipid profile and exercise capacity, as compared with 60-min exercise training sessions. Eur J Cardiovasc Prev Rehabil 15:453-459. © 2008, European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Hansen, D., Dendale, P., Berger, J., Onkelinx, S., Reyckers, U., Hermans, A., … Meeusen, R. (2008). Importance of exercise training session duration in the rehabilitation of coronary artery disease patients. European Journal of Preventive Cardiology, 15(4), 453–459. https://doi.org/10.1097/HJR.0b013e3282fd5c5e
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