Contemporary cardiopulmonary rehabilitation programs often utilize cycling ergometer, involving one-on-one heart rate monitoring by physiotherapists to ensure that patients reach the target training intensity during training sessions. However, the process is frequently described as monotonous and boring, resulting in early fatigue of therapists and patients as well as poor compliance, leading to undertraining and suboptimal outcomes. This study aims to test the feasibility of the "Intelligent Cardiopulmonary Training System (ICRS)" and a novel indicator of measuring the adherence to training intensity. The ICRS was developed with the idea to provide machine-based supervision on the user's heart rate during training. It provides moderate-intensity continuous training with a cycling ergometer. This system automatically adjusts the paddling resistance according to the user's real-time heart rate, and helps to improve the user's adherence to pre-determined training intensity without trainer's watch. The automation of intensity adjustment has its potential for conditions in which supervision is not feasible.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
10
Participants are required to wear a wristband heart rate monitor and exercise on a cycling ergometer-based ICRS for 30 minutes (5 minute of warm-up, 20 minutes of training followed by 5 minutes of cooldown). The target intensity for the 20-min training period is set at 60%\~80% HRR determined in the pretest of cardiopulmonary exercise test.
Department of rehabilitation, WanFang Hospital
Taipei, Taiwan
RECRUITINGPeak oxygen consumption (VO2-peak)
Peak oxygen consumption is measured by cardiopulmonary test.
Time frame: 4 weeks
Peak workload
Peak workload is measured by cardiopulmonary exercise test
Time frame: 4 weeks
percentage of time (%time) within the pre-determined target heart rate
The ICRS outputs the heart rate-time plots and calculated the %time for each session
Time frame: 4 weeks
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