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Original article
Efficacy of cardiac rehabilitation after balloon pulmonary angioplasty for chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
  1. Shigefumi Fukui1,
  2. Takeshi Ogo1,
  3. Hiroshi Takaki1,
  4. Jin Ueda1,
  5. Akihiro Tsuji1,
  6. Yoshiaki Morita2,
  7. Reon Kumasaka1,
  8. Tetsuo Arakawa1,
  9. Michio Nakanishi1,
  10. Tetsuya Fukuda2,
  11. Satoshi Yasuda1,
  12. Hisao Ogawa1,
  13. Norifumi Nakanishi1,
  14. Yoichi Goto1
  1. 1The Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Centre, Suita, Japan
  2. 2The Department of Radiology, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Centre, Suita, Japan
  1. Correspondence to Takeshi Ogo, Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Centre, 7-1 Fujishirodai 5-chome, Suita 565-8565, Japan; ogo.takeshi.hp{at}mail.ncvc.go.jp

Abstract

Objective To determine safety and efficacy of cardiac rehabilitation (CR) initiated immediately following balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) in patients with inoperable chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) who presented with continuing exercise intolerance and symptoms on effort even after a course of BPA; 2–8 sessions/patient.

Methods Forty-one consecutive patients with inoperable CTEPH who underwent their final BPA with improved resting mean pulmonary arterial pressure of 24.7±5.5 mm Hg and who suffered remaining exercise intolerance were prospectively studied. Participants were divided into two groups just after the final BPA (6.8±2.3 days): patients with (CR group, n=17) or without (non-CR group, n=24) participation in a 12-week CR of 1-week inhospital training followed by an 11-week outpatient programme. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing, haemodynamics, and quality of life (QOL) were assessed before and after CR.

Results No significant between-group differences were found for any baseline characteristics. At week 12, peak oxygen uptake (VO2), per cent predicted peak VO2 (70.7±9.4% to 78.2±12.8%, p<0.01), peak workload, and oxygen pulse significantly improved in the CR group compared with the non-CR group, with a tendency towards improvement in mental health-related QOL. Quadriceps strength and heart failure (HF) symptoms (WHO functional class, 2.2–1.8, p=0.01) significantly improved within the CR group. During the CR, no patient experienced adverse events or deterioration of right-sided HF or haemodynamics as confirmed via catheterisation.

Conclusions The combination of BPA and subsequent CR is a new treatment strategy for inoperable CTEPH to improve exercise capacity to near-normal levels and HF symptoms, with a good safety profile.

This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

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