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  4. It needs more than a myocardial infarction to start exercising: the CoLaus|PsyCoLaus prospective study
 
research article

It needs more than a myocardial infarction to start exercising: the CoLaus|PsyCoLaus prospective study

Flammer, Francois
•
Paraschiv-Ionescu, Anisoara  
•
Marques-Vidal, Pedro M
February 12, 2024
BMC Cardiovascular Disorders

BackgroundIncreased physical activity (PA) is recommended after an acute coronary event to prevent recurrences. Whether patients with acute coronary event actually increase their PA has not been assessed using objective methods such as accelerometer. We aimed to assess the subjectively and objectively measured physical activity (PA) levels of patients before and after an acute coronary event.MethodsData from the three follow-up surveys of a prospective study conducted in Lausanne, Switzerland. Self-reported PA was assessed by questionnaire in the first (2009-2012) and second (2014-2017) follow-ups. Objective PA was assessed by a wrist-worn accelerometer in the second and third (2018-2021) follow-ups. Participants who developed an acute coronary event between each survey period were considered as eligible. PA levels were compared before and after the event, and changes in PA levels were also compared between participants who developed an acute event with three gender and age-matched healthy controls.ResultsFor self-reported PA, data from 43 patients (12 women, 64 +/- 9 years) were used. No differences were found for all PA levels expressed in minutes/day before and after the event: moderate PA, median and [interquartile range] 167 [104-250] vs. 153 [109-240]; light PA: 151 [77-259] vs. 166 [126-222], and sedentary behaviour: 513 [450-635] vs. 535 [465-642] minutes/day. Comparison with gender- and age-matched healthy controls showed no differences regarding trends in reported PA. For accelerometer-assessed PA, data from 32 patients (16 women, 66 +/- 9 years) were used. No differences were found for all PA levels expressed in minutes/day before and after the event: moderate PA: 159 [113-189] vs. 141 [111-189]; light PA: 95.8 [79-113] vs. 95.9 [79-117], and sedentary behaviour: 610 [545-659] vs. 602 [540-624]. Regarding the comparison with gender- and age-matched healthy controls, controls had an increase in accelerometer-assessed sedentary behaviour as % of day: multivariable adjusted average standard error 2.7 +/- 0.6, while no increase was found for cases: 0.1 +/- 1.1; no differences were found for the other PA levels.ConclusionPatients do not seem to change their PA levels after a first coronary event. Our results should be confirmed in larger samples.

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10.1186_s12872-024-03755-9.pdf

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