Paper
Effects of high-intensity interval versus continuous exercise training on post-exercise heart rate recovery in coronary heart-disease patients.
Published Oct 1, 2017 · K. Villelabeitia-Jaureguizar, D. Vicente-Campos, Alejandro Berenguel Senén
International journal of cardiology
Q1 SJR score
50
Citations
3
Influential Citations
Abstract
Abstract removed due to Elsevier request; this does not indicate any issues with the research. Click the full text link above to read the abstract and view the original source.
Study Snapshot
Key takeawayHIIT improves VO2peak and post-exercise heart-rate recovery in patients with chronic ischemic heart disease of low risk compared to continuous training.
PopulationOlder adults (50-71 years)
Sample size24
MethodsObservational
OutcomesBody Mass Index projections
ResultsSocial networks mitigate obesity in older groups.
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References
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Post-Exercise Heart Rate Recovery Independently Predicts Clinical Outcome in Patients with Acute Decompensated Heart Failure
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Effect of High-Intensity Interval Versus Continuous Exercise Training on Functional Capacity and Quality of Life in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: A RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL
HIIT significantly improves functional capacity and quality of life in patients with coronary artery disease compared to continuous exercise training, without increasing cardiovascular risk.
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High Intensity Interval versus Moderate Intensity Continuous Training in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease: A Meta-analysis of Physiological and Clinical Parameters.
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Citations
The impact of high intensity training and sports on recipients of solid organ transplants: a narrative review
High-intensity exercise is a safe method for improving physiological parameters and reducing coronary heart disease prevalence in solid organ transplant recipients, but follow-up studies show low retention.
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Effect of an eight-week high-intensity interval training programme on circulating sphingolipid levels in middle-aged adults at elevated cardiometabolic risk (SphingoFIT)—Protocol for a randomised controlled exercise trial
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Integrated Chinese and Western medicine for stable angina pectoris of coronary heart disease: a real-world study including 690 patients
Integrated Chinese and Western medicine treatment may improve prognosis and reduce the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with stable angina pectoris of coronary heart disease.
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