• Heart Lung · May 2014

    Pulmonary rehabilitation improves heart rate variability at peak exercise, exercise capacity and health-related quality of life in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

    • Shih-Tsung Cheng, Yao-Kuang Wu, Mei-Chen Yang, Chun-Yao Huang, Hui-Chuan Huang, Wen-Hua Chu, and Chou-Chin Lan.
    • Department of Cardiology, Taipei Tzu Chi Hospital, Buddhist Tzu Chi Medical Foundation, Taipei, Taiwan; School of Medicine, Tzu Chi University, Hualien, Taiwan.
    • Heart Lung. 2014 May 1;43(3):249-55.

    ObjectivePatients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) appear to have impaired cardiac autonomic modulation with depressed heart rate variability (HRV). Pulmonary rehabilitation (PR) is recommended as an integral part of the management. However, the effect of PR on HRV at peak exercise remains unclear.MethodsSixty-four patients with COPD participated in a 12-week, 2 sessions-per-week, hospital-based PR program. Baseline and post-PR status were evaluated by spirometry, HRV, health-related quality of life (HRQL, St. George's Respiratory Questionnaire, SGRQ), cardiopulmonary exercise test, respiratory muscle strength, and dyspnea Borg's scale.ResultsAfter PR, there were significant improvements in the time and frequency domains of HRV with increased standard deviation of the normal R-R intervals, difference between adjacent normal R-R intervals within a given time minus one, high-frequency and decreased low-frequency, as well as concurrent improvements in HRQL, exercise capacity, dyspnea score, and respiratory muscle strength (all p < 0.05).ConclusionsPR results in significant improvements in autonomic function, with concurrent improvements in HRQL and exercise capacity.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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