1. Trajectory of Abdominal Skeletal Muscle Changes During Cardiac Rehabilitation in Patients With Aortic Disease.
- Author
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Masashi Yamashita, Kentaro Kamiya, Tadashi Kitamura, Nobuaki Hamazaki, Takafumi Ichikawa, Manaka Shibuya, Shuken Kobayashi, Yuta Suzuki, Kensuke Ueno, Shota Uchida, Takumi Noda, Kazuki Hotta, Emi Maekawa, Atsuhiko Matsunaga, Minako Yamaoka-Tojo, Junya Ako, and Kagami Miyaji
- Subjects
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SKELETAL muscle physiology , *AORTIC diseases , *HOSPITAL patients , *SCIENTIFIC observation , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *ABDOMINAL muscles , *ERECTOR spinae muscles , *REGRESSION analysis , *FISHER exact test , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *SUBACUTE care , *CARDIAC rehabilitation , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *COMPUTED tomography , *BONE density , *DATA analysis software , *DISEASE management , *OUTPATIENTS , *LONGITUDINAL method , *ABDOMINAL radiography , *ADIPOSE tissues - Abstract
Objective: This study focused on routine computed tomography imaging for aortic disease management and evaluated the trajectory of skeletal muscle changes through inpatient and outpatient cardiac rehabilitation. Design: Prospective observational study included patients who underwent abdominal computed tomography three times (baseline, postacute care, and follow-up). The area and density of the allabdominal and erector spine muscles and intramuscular adipose tissue were measured. A generalized linear model with patients as random effects was used to investigate skeletal muscle changes. Results: Thirty-nine patients completed outpatient cardiac rehabilitation, and 60 were incomplete. Skeletal muscle area significantly decreased from baseline to the follow-up period only in the incomplete rehabilitation group. Skeletal muscle density significantly decreased from baseline to postacute care and increased at the follow-up period, but only patients who completed rehabilitation showed recovery up to baseline at the follow-up period. These trajectories were more pronounced in the erector spine muscle. Intramuscular adipose tissue showed a trend of gradual increase, but only the incomplete rehabilitation group showed a significant difference from baseline to the follow-up period. Conclusions: The density of skeletal muscle may reflect the most common clinical course; skeletal muscle area and intramuscular adipose tissue are unlikely to improve positively, and their maintenance seemed optimal. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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