Physical activity patterns of patients with cardiopulmonary illnesses

Huong Q Nguyen, Bonnie G Steele, Cynthia M Dougherty, Robert L Burr, Huong Q Nguyen, Bonnie G Steele, Cynthia M Dougherty, Robert L Burr

Abstract

Objectives: The aims of this paper were (1) to describe objectively confirmed physical activity patterns across 3 chronic cardiopulmonary conditions, and (2) to examine the relationship between selected physical activity dimensions with disease severity, self-reported physical and emotional functioning, and exercise performance.

Design: Cross-sectional study.

Setting: Participants' home environment.

Participants: Patients with cardiopulmonary illnesses: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n=63), heart failure (n=60), and patients with implantable cardioverter defibrillator (n=60).

Interventions: Not applicable.

Main outcome measures: Seven ambulatory physical activity dimensions (total steps, percent time active, percent time ambulating at low, medium, and high intensity, maximum cadence for 30 continuous minutes, and peak performance) were measured with an accelerometer.

Results: Subjects with COPD had the lowest amount of ambulatory physical activity compared with subjects with heart failure and cardiac dysrhythmias (all 7 activity dimensions, P<.05); total step counts were: 5319 versus 7464 versus 9570, respectively. Six-minute walk distance was correlated (r=.44-.65, P<.01) with all physical activity dimensions in the COPD sample, the strongest correlations being with total steps and peak performance. In subjects with cardiac impairment, maximal oxygen consumption had only small to moderate correlations with 5 of the physical activity dimensions (r=.22-.40, P<.05). In contrast, correlations between 6-minute walk test distance and physical activity were higher (r=.48-.61, P<.01) albeit in a smaller sample of only patients with heart failure. For all 3 samples, self-reported physical and mental health functioning, age, body mass index, airflow obstruction, and ejection fraction had either relatively small or nonsignificant correlations with physical activity.

Conclusions: All 7 dimensions of ambulatory physical activity discriminated between subjects with COPD, heart failure, and cardiac dysrhythmias. Depending on the research or clinical goal, use of 1 dimension, such as total steps, may be sufficient. Although physical activity had high correlations with performance on a 6-minute walk test relative to other variables, accelerometry-based physical activity monitoring provides unique, important information about real-world behavior in patients with cardiopulmonary illness not already captured with existing measures.

Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00373932 NCT00467298 NCT00522340.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of interest

We certify that no party having a direct interest in the results of the research supporting this article has or will confer a benefit on us or on any organization with which we are associated. We certify that all financial and material support for this research and work are clearly identified in the title page of the manuscript.

Copyright © 2012 American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure I
Figure I
Figure IA. Scatterplots of Six Minute Walk Distance, Total Steps, and Peak Performance in Subjects with COPD (n=63) Figure IB. Scatterplots of Six Minute Walk Distance, Total Steps, and Peak Performance in Subjects with Heart Failure (n=24)
Figure I
Figure I
Figure IA. Scatterplots of Six Minute Walk Distance, Total Steps, and Peak Performance in Subjects with COPD (n=63) Figure IB. Scatterplots of Six Minute Walk Distance, Total Steps, and Peak Performance in Subjects with Heart Failure (n=24)
Figure II
Figure II
Scatterplots of VO2Max, Total Steps, and Peak Performance in Subjects with Heart Failure and Cardiac Dysrhythmias (n=96)

Source: PubMed

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