MedPath

Effect of Exercises in improving the overall health and heart functions in Patients following a heart attack

Not Applicable
Conditions
Health Condition 1: null- Patients with Myocardial infarction who under went Angioplasty, medically stable.
Registration Number
CTRI/2018/05/013649
Lead Sponsor
Christian Medical College
Brief Summary

Not available

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
ot Yet Recruiting
Sex
Not specified
Target Recruitment
0
Inclusion Criteria

All Adult Participants who are 65 years of age or below, treated for acute coronary syndrome and medically stable at discharge

Exclusion Criteria

Participants with contraindications to treadmill testing

Participants who are physically unable to walk- suffering from lower limb and hip injuries, Osteoarthritis of lower limb and spine, myoneuropathies,

Unstable angina

Uncontrolled HTN (SBP >160 &/or DBP >100mmHg)

Uncontrolled dysrhythmias

Decompensated heart failure (not evaluated or effectively treated)

Severe stenotic or regurgitant valvular disease

Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Poor left ventricular function (EF < 30%)

angina or ischemia at low workloads

Acute infection or related symptoms,

Not willing to follow up

Study & Design

Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Not specified
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1) Functional capacity as measured by METS and Heart rate recovery at 1 min by Bruce protocol exercise stress test, 6min Walk distance (6MWD) and VO2 max <br/ ><br>2) Cardiac functions as measured by ECHO parameters- LV volumes, LV ejection fraction, LV medial global longitudinal strain (GLS), LV e/eâ?? and LV wall motion score index. <br/ ><br>Timepoint: Baseline and at 12 weeks.
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
1.Improvement in cardio-metabolic profile (blood sugars, lipid profile) <br/ ><br>2.Improvement in Waist to Hip Ratio (WHR) and or Body Mass Index (BMI) <br/ ><br>3.Decreased resting heart rate and blood pressure <br/ ><br>Timepoint: 12 weeks
© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath