Abstract

This study evaluated the efficacy of an exercise program after arterial bypass surgery. Patients undergoing bypass surgery were randomized to a control group (group I), with standard preoperative and postoperative care, or the intervention group (group II) with a supervised exercise program of twice-weekly treadmill assessments from 4 to 10 weeks postoperatively. Ankle-brachial pressure indices and hemodynamic measurements were recorded before and after exercise. The mean increase of maximum walking distance was 3.8% in group I and 175.4% in group II (P = .001). There was a significant difference between group I and II in the mean ankle-brachial pressure indices increase at the second assessment (0.08 versus 0.23; P = .02). A supervised exercise program leads to better improvement after lower limb bypass surgery for ischemia, but the feasibility of a formal exercise program would be undermined by the reluctance of patients to participate, both in the short-term and long-term.

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