Article

Determinants of cardiorespiratory fitness at 3, 6 and 12 months poststroke.

Department of Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Kinesiology and Rehabilitation Sciences, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Disability and Rehabilitation (impact factor: 1.5). 03/2012; 34(21):1835-42. DOI:10.3109/09638288.2012.665130 pp.1835-42
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT To better delineate intervention programs, knowledge of the factors that are associated with physical fitness in stroke survivors is crucial. This study aimed to predict cardiorespiratory fitness based on standardized measures along the several dimensions of the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) model at several time intervals in the first year after stroke.
Forty patients were assessed at 3, 6 and 12 months poststroke. A symptom-limited graded cycle ergometer test was used to assess cardiorespiratory fitness. Outcome variables were VO(2) peak and the Oxygen Uptake Efficiency Slope (OUES). Impairments, activity limitations, participation restrictions, personal and environmental factors were assessed to determine predictive factors.
Explained variance at 3, 6 and 12 months poststroke was 39%, 55% and 91% for VO(2) peak and 55%, 63% and 79% for OUES. A strong association between knee muscle strength and cardiorespiratory fitness was found at each measurement time, explaining up to 72 % of the variance in fitness. At 12 months poststroke, functional mobility, body mass index (BMI) and emotional status also contributed to explain variance.
Knee muscle strength was found to be a very strong predictor of cardiorespiratory fitness during the first year after stroke and functional mobility became important at 12 months poststroke.

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Keywords

12 months poststroke
 
activity limitations
 
body mass index
 
cardiorespiratory fitness
 
emotional status
 
environmental factors
 
Explained variance
 
functional mobility
 
International Classification
 
knee muscle strength
 
Outcome variables
 
Oxygen Uptake Efficiency Slope
 
physical fitness
 
predictive factors
 
standardized measures
 
strong association
 
strong predictor
 
symptom-limited graded cycle ergometer test
 
time intervals
 
variance