Detalhes do Documento

Cardiac rehabilitation to inpatient heart transplant—HRN4HTx intervention protocol

Autor(es): Loureiro, Maria ; Parola, Vítor ; Duarte, João ; Oliveira, Isabel de Jesus ; Antunes, Margarida ; Coutinho, Gonçalo ; Martins, Maria Manuela ; Novo, André

Data: 2024

Identificador Persistente: http://hdl.handle.net/10198/30219

Origem: Biblioteca Digital do IPB

Assunto(s): Cardiac rehabilitation; Heart transplantation; inpatient; rehabilitation nursing


Descrição

Heart transplantation is the gold-standard treatment for terminal heart failure. Despite being successful, pre- and post-transplant limitations interfere with patients’ functional capacity, self-care, and quality of life post-surgery. Rehabilitation is necessary to address these limitations, prevent complications, and promote a safe return home. This study analyzes the safety of a phase 1 cardiac rehabilitation protocol (RN4HTx) in heart transplant patients and its effects on self-care capacity. A quantitative, descriptive study was conducted with 19 heart transplant recipients. The protocol was implemented in collaboration with a rehabilitation professional, who monitored adverse events, hemodynamic variables, self-care capacity (Barthel) pre- and post-transplant, and functional capacity at discharge (6 min walk test). The results showed that 68.42% of recipients were men, with an average age of 50.21 years and 15 days of hospitalization post-transplant. Approximately 73.68% of recipients were transferred from other wards with changes in functional capacity. All patients progressed to the final stage of the program without adverse events. There was a notable improvement in self-care capacity before and after transplantation, with a measure of functional status of 310.035 m (6MWT). The study found that RN4HTx is a feasible cardiac rehabilitation program without adverse events in the immediate postoperative period following heart transplantation, positively impacting functional recovery and therapeutic self-care capacity, thus increasing the safety of returning home. This study was retrospectively registered on Clinical Trials—NCT06552390.

Tipo de Documento Artigo científico
Idioma Inglês
Contribuidor(es) Biblioteca Digital do IPB
Licença CC
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