“…Exercise intensity was commonly prescribed based on a percentage of peak oxygen consumption (V̇O 2peak ) (5/17), peak heart rate (for level of injury below T6; 3/17) or peak heart rate reserve (for level of injury above T6; 3/17), or using ratings of perceived exertion (e.g., Borg CR10 scale or Borg RPE 6-20 scale; 3/17). In addition, exercise intensity in each study was defined as either light, moderate, moderate-to-vigorous, or vigorous-intensity based on the classification of the American College of Sport Medicine ( Mitchell et al, 2019 ; American College of Sports, 2021 ) ( Table 3 ); one study used light-intensity ( Brizuela et al, 2020 ), three studies employed moderate-intensity ( McLean and Skinner, 1995 ; Dyson-Hudson et al, 2007 ; Farkas et al, 2021 ), nine applied moderate-to-vigorous-intensity ( Davis et al, 1987 ; DiCarlo, 1988 ; El-Sayed and Younesian, 2005 ; Ordonez et al, 2013 ; Horiuchi and Okita, 2017 ; Nightingale et al, 2017b ; Graham et al, 2019 ; Williams et al, 2020 ; Alrashidi et al, 2021 ), and four trained at vigorous-intensity ( Silva et al, 1998 ; Jacobs, 2009 ; Harnish et al, 2017 ; Bresnahan et al, 2019 ). Arm cranking speed was between 50 and 60 revolutions per minute.…”