Abstract

To determine if, in patients with interstitial lung disease (ILD), fatigue might be lessened after vigorous aerobic exercise. 13 physically inactive patients (5 men and 8 women; age 57.2±9.1 years, BMI 28.2±4.6kgm(-2)) with ILD of heterogeneous etiology and able to walk on a motor driven treadmill without physical limitation were enrolled. Subjects underwent cardiopulmonary exercise (CPET) and 6-minwalk (6MWT) tests and completed Fatigue Severity Scale and Human Activity Profile questionnaires before and after an aerobic exercise-training regimen. The training regimen required participation in at least 24 of 30 prescribed aerobic exercise training sessions at a target heart rate of 70-80% of the heart rate reserve, 30minper session, 3 times per week for 10 weeks. After training, a 55% (p<0.001) increase in time to anaerobic threshold on the CPET, and an 11% (p=0.045) reduction in performance fatigability index (PFI), calculated from the performance on the 6MWT were observed. Distance walked on the 6MWT (6MWD) increased by 49.7±46.9m(p=0.002). Significant improvements in scores on the Fatigue Severity Scale (p=0.046) and Human Activity Profile (AAS p=0.024; MAS p=0.029) were also observed. No adverse events related to the training regimen were noted. After training, the decrease in fatigability appeared to result in increased 6MWD and was associated with physical activity. Since significant declines in 6MWD may be a marker for impending mortality in ILD, a better understanding of the etiological state of fatigue in patients with ILD and its reversal might provide fundamental insight into disease progression and even survival. [ClinicalTrials.gov identifier NCT00678821].

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call