[Purpose] This study aimed to identify the factors associated with exercise behavior in
patients with peripheral arterial disease. [Participants and Methods] The study included
43 patients with peripheral arterial disease (mean age, 75.2 ± 5.6 years) who were
admitted for endovascular treatment from January 2020 to June 2021. Participants were
surveyed through questionnaires to assess their physical function for determining their
exercise behavior and the presence of physical, personal, and environmental factors that
might have affected their stage of change regarding exercise behavior. [Results] A
comparison of physical, personal, and environmental factors between the two groups
classified by the presence or absence of exercise behavior showed that subjective health
and exercise self-efficacy were significantly lower in the group without exercise.
Furthermore, a difference was noted in the presence or absence of work. The adjusted
binomial logistic regression analysis results using each of the factors differing between
the groups, plus the walking impairment questionnaire total score as explanatory
variables, showed a significant relationship with exercise self-efficacy only.
[Conclusion] The results of this study showed that exercise self-efficacy presented a
useful predictive relationship with the presence of exercise behavior in patients with
peripheral arterial disease.
This study aimed to clarify the effects of pre-and postoperative physical function on the 6-minute walking distance (6MWD) in patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD). Method: Forty-two elderly patients with PAD who were hospitalized for revascularization and able to walk independently were included in the study. The 6MWD, ankle brachial index (ABI), weight-bearing index (WBI), gait, and intermittent claudication distance (ICD) were measured before and after the surgery, and skeletal muscle index was measured only before surgery. Analyses were performed by comparing the pre-and postoperative values of each factor using a paired t-test. In addition, multiple regression analysis was performed with 6MWD as the dependent variable before and after surgery. Results: Postoperatively, pain disappeared in 22 patients, and ABI, ICD, 6MWD, and stride length improved significantly. ICD and stride length were extracted as factors related to 6MWD before and after surgery, and ABI, WBI, and stride length were extracted as factors related to 6MWD after surgery. Conclusion: The improvement of intermittent claudication associated with revascularization suggests a stronger influence of functional aspects on postoperative 6 MWD.
To analyze the immediate effects of stretching on respiratory and trunk functions using a stretch pole half-cut in healthy male participants. [Participants and Methods] Thirty healthy male participants with a mean age of 21.1 ± 0.8 years were recruited in this study. The participant had to lay on his back on the convex surface of the pole with the semicircle of the pole touching the surface of the platform mat. The convex of the pole was placed at the level from seventh to 10th thoracic vertebra for 4 min and was applied perpendicular (anatomically horizontal) to the body axis. Respiratory function and muscle strength using a spirometer with attached units, maximum-minimum chest wall expansion difference using a tape measure, and body alignment, such as angles obtained from the spinal mouse, were measured before and immediately after the intervention in random order.[Results] The total inclination angle was found to decrease significantly, while the thoracic kyphosis angle and maximum inspiratory pressure showed a significant increase. [Conclusion] This intervention was suggested to be easy for incorporating into day life and useful in situations where the subjects want to increase the maximum inspiratory pressure, such as in sports.
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