The purpose of this RETROSPECTIVE study was to compare the effect of a hospital and home-based cardiopulmonary rehabilitation (CPR) program on exercise endurance and quality of life in post-acute COVID-19 patients. 88 post-acute COVID-19 patients were divided two groups according to receiving hospital (n=45) or home-based CPR (n=43)in our rehabilitation clinic between January and July 2021. Both protocols consisted of aerobic, breathing and flexibility exercises. Hospital-based CPR: three or four days per week for a total of 20 sessions. Home-based CPR: three or four days/a week over a period of six weeks. The results of six meters walk test (6MWT) for exercise endurance as a main outcome measure, and Borg-dyspnea/fatigue, the visual analog scale (VAS) for pain and the Short Form-36 (SF-36) as secondary outcome measures before and after treatment were recorded.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
88
Both protocols consisted of aerobic, breathing and flexibility exercises. Hospital-based CPR: three or four days per week for a total of 20 sessions. Home-based CPR: three or four days/a week over a period of six weeks.
Eskişehir Osmangazi University
Eskişehir, Odunpazarı, Turkey (Türkiye)
Exercise endurance
Six minutes walk test (All patients walked along a 30-meter-long corridor without obstacles at their normal walking speed, how many meters they walked was noted.)
Time frame: One day before exercise programme start and one day later exercise programme ends
Dyspnea
Borg scale were also measured before and after 6MWT for perceived dyspnea (scale range from 0 to 10)
Time frame: One day before exercise programme start and one day later exercise programme ends
Muscle fatigue
Borg muscle fatigue (scale range from 6 to 20: higher values show more severe symptoms)
Time frame: One day before exercise programme start and one day later exercise programme ends
short form 36
A quality-of-life assessment was performed using the Short Form-36, which has 36 items regarding physical function, physical role, emotional role, energy, body pain, mental health, general health, and social function. The scale ranges from 0 (poor health) to 100 (perfect health)
Time frame: One day before exercise programme start and one day later exercise programme ends
Musculoskeletal Pain
Visual analog scale-pain was used to measure general body musculoskeletal pain, which was assessed from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst possible pain)
Time frame: One day before exercise programme start and one day later exercise programme ends
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