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Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls

The purpose of the present study was to compare muscular strength of knee extensors and arm flexor muscles of cardiac patients (n = 638) and healthy controls (n = 961) in different age groups. Isometric torques were measured in a sitting position with the elbow, hip, and knee flexed to 90(0). For st...

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Autores principales: Baum, K., Hildebrandt, U., Edel, K., Bertram, R., Hahmann, H., Bremer, F.J., Böhmen, S., Kammerlander, C., Serafin, M., Rüther, Th., Miche, E.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Ivyspring International Publisher 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2706425/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19584952
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author Baum, K.
Hildebrandt, U.
Edel, K.
Bertram, R.
Hahmann, H.
Bremer, F.J.
Böhmen, S.
Kammerlander, C.
Serafin, M.
Rüther, Th.
Miche, E.
author_facet Baum, K.
Hildebrandt, U.
Edel, K.
Bertram, R.
Hahmann, H.
Bremer, F.J.
Böhmen, S.
Kammerlander, C.
Serafin, M.
Rüther, Th.
Miche, E.
author_sort Baum, K.
collection PubMed
description The purpose of the present study was to compare muscular strength of knee extensors and arm flexor muscles of cardiac patients (n = 638) and healthy controls (n = 961) in different age groups. Isometric torques were measured in a sitting position with the elbow, hip, and knee flexed to 90(0). For statistical analysis, age groups were pooled in decades from the age of 30 to 90 years. Additionally, the influence of physical lifestyle prior to disease on muscular strength was obtained in the patients. For statistical analysis three-way ANOVA (factors age, gender, and physical activity level) was used. Both in patients and in controls a significant age-dependent decline in maximal torque could be observed for arm flexors and knee extensors. Maximal leg extensor muscle showed statistically significant differences between healthy controls and cardiac patients as well as between subgroups of patients: Physically inactive patients showed lowest torques (male: 148 ± 18 Nm; female: 82 ± 25 Nm) while highest values were measured in control subjects (male: 167 ± 16 Nm; female: 93 ± 17 Nm). In contrast, arm flexor muscles did not show any significant influence of health status or sports history. This qualitative difference between weight-bearing leg muscles and the muscle group of the upper extremity suggest that lower skeletal muscle strength in heart patients is mainly a consequence of selective disuse of leg muscles rather than any pathological skeletal muscle metabolism. Since a certain level of skeletal muscle strength is a prerequisite to cope with everyday activities, strength training is recommended as an important part of cardiac rehabilitation.
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spelling pubmed-27064252009-07-07 Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls Baum, K. Hildebrandt, U. Edel, K. Bertram, R. Hahmann, H. Bremer, F.J. Böhmen, S. Kammerlander, C. Serafin, M. Rüther, Th. Miche, E. Int J Med Sci Research Paper The purpose of the present study was to compare muscular strength of knee extensors and arm flexor muscles of cardiac patients (n = 638) and healthy controls (n = 961) in different age groups. Isometric torques were measured in a sitting position with the elbow, hip, and knee flexed to 90(0). For statistical analysis, age groups were pooled in decades from the age of 30 to 90 years. Additionally, the influence of physical lifestyle prior to disease on muscular strength was obtained in the patients. For statistical analysis three-way ANOVA (factors age, gender, and physical activity level) was used. Both in patients and in controls a significant age-dependent decline in maximal torque could be observed for arm flexors and knee extensors. Maximal leg extensor muscle showed statistically significant differences between healthy controls and cardiac patients as well as between subgroups of patients: Physically inactive patients showed lowest torques (male: 148 ± 18 Nm; female: 82 ± 25 Nm) while highest values were measured in control subjects (male: 167 ± 16 Nm; female: 93 ± 17 Nm). In contrast, arm flexor muscles did not show any significant influence of health status or sports history. This qualitative difference between weight-bearing leg muscles and the muscle group of the upper extremity suggest that lower skeletal muscle strength in heart patients is mainly a consequence of selective disuse of leg muscles rather than any pathological skeletal muscle metabolism. Since a certain level of skeletal muscle strength is a prerequisite to cope with everyday activities, strength training is recommended as an important part of cardiac rehabilitation. Ivyspring International Publisher 2009-07-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2706425/ /pubmed/19584952 Text en © Ivyspring International Publisher. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/). Reproduction is permitted for personal, noncommercial use, provided that the article is in whole, unmodified, and properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Baum, K.
Hildebrandt, U.
Edel, K.
Bertram, R.
Hahmann, H.
Bremer, F.J.
Böhmen, S.
Kammerlander, C.
Serafin, M.
Rüther, Th.
Miche, E.
Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title_full Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title_fullStr Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title_short Comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
title_sort comparison of skeletal muscle strength between cardiac patients and age-matched healthy controls
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2706425/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19584952
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