The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity

Hemorheological variables are strong predictors of coronary heart disease. Several cross-sectional and longitudinal training studies on healthy populations suggest that physical activity improves hemorheological profile through a decrease in whole blood viscosity, plasma viscosity (VIS), hematocr...

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Main Author: Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/15729
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-157292018-01-05T17:37:58Z The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van Hemorheological variables are strong predictors of coronary heart disease. Several cross-sectional and longitudinal training studies on healthy populations suggest that physical activity improves hemorheological profile through a decrease in whole blood viscosity, plasma viscosity (VIS), hematocrit (HCT), and fibrinogen (FIB). Although cardiac rehabilitation programs (CRP) have proven to be effective at reducing mortality, morbidity and improving cardiac risk factors, it is unclear whether CRPs improve hemorheological profile in secondary prevention patients. The purpose of this study was to determine if CRP improves plasma rheology, HDL cholesterol, triglyceride levels and exercise capacity. Fifteen subjects enrolled in a three month CRP program had HCT, FIB, and VIS measured on three occasions: twice before the CRP intervention, and once at the end of the CRP intervention. Changes in HDL, triglycerides, and exercise capacity were measured before and after the CRP intervention. There were no significant differences in any of the hemorheological variables over time [HCT (p=0.330); FIB (p=0.275); VIS (p=0.533)]. There was a modest, but statistically significant correlation between fibrinogen and plasma viscosity (p=0.035, r = 0.319). Exercise capacity, as measured by time completed on the Bruce treadmill protocol, improved significantly (p<0.00l). HDL cholesterol levels and triglyceride levels just failed to reach significance (p=0.08 and p = 0.123 respectively). This study suggests that CRP provides enough exercise stimulus to increase exercise capacity; however, CRP does not provide adequate stimulus to bring about the hemorheological changes observed in other studies. Education, Faculty of Kinesiology, School of Graduate 2009-11-24T23:27:15Z 2009-11-24T23:27:15Z 2004 2004-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/15729 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 2795096 bytes application/pdf
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language English
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description Hemorheological variables are strong predictors of coronary heart disease. Several cross-sectional and longitudinal training studies on healthy populations suggest that physical activity improves hemorheological profile through a decrease in whole blood viscosity, plasma viscosity (VIS), hematocrit (HCT), and fibrinogen (FIB). Although cardiac rehabilitation programs (CRP) have proven to be effective at reducing mortality, morbidity and improving cardiac risk factors, it is unclear whether CRPs improve hemorheological profile in secondary prevention patients. The purpose of this study was to determine if CRP improves plasma rheology, HDL cholesterol, triglyceride levels and exercise capacity. Fifteen subjects enrolled in a three month CRP program had HCT, FIB, and VIS measured on three occasions: twice before the CRP intervention, and once at the end of the CRP intervention. Changes in HDL, triglycerides, and exercise capacity were measured before and after the CRP intervention. There were no significant differences in any of the hemorheological variables over time [HCT (p=0.330); FIB (p=0.275); VIS (p=0.533)]. There was a modest, but statistically significant correlation between fibrinogen and plasma viscosity (p=0.035, r = 0.319). Exercise capacity, as measured by time completed on the Bruce treadmill protocol, improved significantly (p<0.00l). HDL cholesterol levels and triglyceride levels just failed to reach significance (p=0.08 and p = 0.123 respectively). This study suggests that CRP provides enough exercise stimulus to increase exercise capacity; however, CRP does not provide adequate stimulus to bring about the hemorheological changes observed in other studies. === Education, Faculty of === Kinesiology, School of === Graduate
author Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van
spellingShingle Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van
The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
author_facet Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van
author_sort Velzen, Minetaro Vincent Naruki-van
title The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
title_short The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
title_full The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
title_fullStr The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
title_full_unstemmed The effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, Hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
title_sort effect of a cardiac rehabiltation exercise program on plasma viscosity, fibrinogen concentration, hematocrit, blood lipids and exercise capacity
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/15729
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