4.5 Article

RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN HEART RATE AND PERCEIVED EXERTION IN NEUROMUSCULAR DISEASES: HOW DO LABORATORY-BASED EXERCISE TESTING RESULTS TRANSLATE TO HOME-BASED AEROBIC TRAINING SESSIONS?

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JOURNAL OF REHABILITATION MEDICINE
卷 55, 期 -, 页码 -

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FOUNDATION REHABILITATION INFORMATION
DOI: 10.2340/jrm.v55.4523

关键词

rehabilitation; exercise; physical exertion; phy-siological monitoring; exercise test; neuromuscular disease; anaerobic threshold; heart rate; physical therapist

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The study aimed to compare the heart rate-perceived exertion relationship between maximal exercise testing and home-based aerobic training in individuals with neuro-muscular diseases. The results showed a high correlation between heart rate and perceived exertion during both testing and training, but most participants had a different perception of effort for the same heart rate during training. Healthcare professionals should be aware of the potential implications of under- and over-training.
Objective: To examine the heart rate-perceived exertion relationship between maximal exercise testing and home-based aerobic training in neuro-muscular diseases.Design: Multicentre randomized controlled trial, intervention group data. Participants: Individuals with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (n = 17), post-polio syndrome (n = 7) or other neuromuscular diseases (n = 6).Methods: Participants followed a 4-month, home-based aerobic training programme guided by heart rate. Heart rate and ratings of perceived exertion (6-20 Borg Scale) were assessed for each minute during a maximal exercise test, and at the end of each exercise interval and recovery period during training. Heart rate and corresponding ratings of perceived exertion values of individual participants during training were visualized using plots, together with the exercise testing linear regression line bet-ween heart rate and ratings of perceived exertion.Results: High correlation coefficients (i.e. > 0.70) were found between heart rate and ratings of per-ceived exertion, in all participants during testing (n = 30), and in 57% of the participants during training. Based on the plots the following distri-bution was found; participants reporting lower (n = 12), similar (n= 10), or higher (n = 8) ratings of perceived exertion values for corresponding heart rates during training compared with testing.Conclusion: Most participants had a different per-ception of effort for corresponding heart rates during training in comparison with exercise testing. Healthcare professionals should be aware that this may imply under-and over-training.

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