Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation for adults with atrial fibrillation
Article 2024 en
Authors
BB
Benjamin J. R. Buckley
LL
Linda Long
SR
Signe Stelling Risom
Abstract
1 min read
Due to few randomised participants and typically short-term follow-up, the impact of ExCR on all-cause mortality or serious adverse events for people with AF is uncertain. ExCR likely improves AF-specific measures including reduced AF recurrence, symptom burden, and episode duration, as well as the mental components of HRQoL. ExCR may improve AF symptom severity, episode frequency, and VO<sub>2peak</sub>. Future high-quality RCTs are needed to assess the benefits of ExCR for people with AF on patient-relevant outcomes including AF symptom severity and burden, AF recurrence, AF-specific quality of life, and clinical events such as mortality, readmissions, and serious adverse events. High-quality trials are needed to investigate how AF subtype and clinical setting (i.e. primary and secondary care) may influence ExCR effectiveness.
Benjamin J. R. Buckley, Linda Long, Deirdre A. Lane, Signe Stelling Risom, Charlotte Fitzhugh, Selina Kikkenborg Berg, Pernille Palm, Kirstine Lærum Sibilitz, Jesper Hastrup Svendsen, Christian Gluud, Ann‐Dorthe Zwisler, Professor Gregory Lip, Lis Neubeck, R. Taylor
Niels A. Stens, Benjamin J. R. Buckley, Grace Dibben, Laurien M. Buffart, Geert Kleinnibbelink, Dorairaj Prabhakaran, Ambalam M. Chandrasekaran, Sanjay Kinra, Ambuj Roy, Gianluca Campo, Arto J. Hautala, Johan A. Snoek, Ralph Maddison, N. Jeanie Santaularia, Scott A. Lear, Julie Houle, Professor Gregory Lip, Niels van Royen, R. Taylor, Dick H. J. Thijssen
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