Aortic Valve Stenosis Clinical Trial
Many patients we encounter a month post TAVI, still complain of having symptoms limiting
their daily activity. The investigators set out to study whether rehabilitation strategy
early after the procedure contributes to reduction of the physical disability these patients
suffer from.
Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a well-established treatment in patients who underwent cardiac
surgery. Patients after TAVI, are natural candidates for referral to exercise-based CR.
Despite this, until 2013 no data have been available about the safety and the efficacy of a
comprehensive rehabilitative period in these subjects. CR is a helpful tool to maintain
independency for daily life activities and participation in socio-cultural life. despite
these differences, both patient groups did benefit in the same way from a post-acute
in-patient rehabilitation program as assessed by 6-Minute Walking Tests and FIM scores.
Patients who were unable to walk and those were slow walkers at baseline experienced an
improvement in functional status after TAVI, whereas the fast walkers did not improve and
actually experienced a modest decrease in 6MWTD.It has been shown that patients referred for
rehabilitation after TAVI are often very frail, with a high grade of functional impairment,
dependence on others and high risk of clinical complications. During a rehabilitation
program, based on a multidimensional assessment and intervention, most patients showed
significant improvement in functional status, quality of life, and autonomy, which remained
stable in the majority of subjects during mid-term follow-up.
To the investigators knowledge, no prospective study compared rehabilitation strategy to
conservative treatment after TAVI. the investigators set off to test the investigators
hypothesize that CR may help in the short and long term prognosis of these patients.
Many patients we encounter a month post TAVI, still complain of having symptoms limiting
their daily activity. The investigators set out to study whether rehabilitation strategy
early after the procedure contributes to reduction of the physical disability these patients
suffer from.
Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is a well-established treatment in patients who underwent cardiac
surgery. Patients after TAVI, are natural candidates for referral to exercise-based CR.
Despite this, until 2013 no data have been available about the safety and the efficacy of a
comprehensive rehabilitative period in these subjects. Nicola Russo et al. compared the
safety and efficacy of a structured, exercise-based CR program in octogenarians after a
traditional sAVR vs. TAVI, and concluded that a short-term, supervised, exercise-based CR is
feasible, safe and effective in octogenarian patients after TAVI as well as after traditional
surgery. An early CR program enhances independence, mobility and functional capacity and
should be encouraged in all patients. Long-term effects and prognostic relevance should be
evaluated in future studies. A similar comparison assessed the hypothesis that patients after
TAVI benefit from CR, compared to patients after surgical aortic-valve replacement (sAVR).
They too concluded that patients after TAVI benefit from cardiac rehabilitation despite their
older age and comorbidities. CR is a helpful tool to maintain independency for daily life
activities and participation in socio-cultural life. The same conclusion was made by Ivan
Fauchère et al. letter to the editor - patients in the TAVI group were older and sicker than
SAVR patients. Despite these differences, both patient groups did benefit in the same way
from a post-acute in-patient rehabilitation program as assessed by 6-Minute Walking Tests and
FIM scores.
Another study, drawn from a cohort of 484 patients with severe symptomatic AS who underwent
TAVI, evaluated the association between physical performance as estimated by the 6-minute
walk test distance (6MWTD) and long-term prognosis after TAVI. They found that compared with
those with 6MWTD above the median value, those who were unable to walk experienced a higher
rate of death after TAVI. In contrast, patients who were unable to walk and those were slow
walkers at baseline experienced an improvement in functional status after TAVI, whereas the
fast walkers did not improve and actually experienced a modest decrease in 6MWTD.
It has been shown that patients referred for rehabilitation after TAVI are often very frail,
with a high grade of functional impairment, dependence on others and high risk of clinical
complications. During a rehabilitation program, based on a multidimensional assessment and
intervention, most patients showed significant improvement in functional status, quality of
life, and autonomy, which remained stable in the majority of subjects during mid-term
follow-up.
To the investigators knowledge, no prospective study compared rehabilitation strategy to
conservative treatment after TAVI. the investigators set off to test our hypothesize that CR
may help in the short and long term prognosis of these patients.
;
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