PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Study proves efficacy of remote physical training in rehabilitation of severe COVID patients

A program developed by researchers at the USP included three weekly sessions of up to 80 minutes each for 16 weeks, with positive effects on cardiorespiratory fitness, lung function, functional capacity, body composition and persistent

Study proves efficacy of remote physical training in rehabilitation of severe COVID patients
2023-05-10
(Press-News.org) Researchers at the University of São Paulo (USP) in Brazil have created an exercise training program that survivors of severe COVID-19 can safely perform at home as rehabilitation therapy for persistent symptoms after they are discharged from hospital. Findings of a study recently reported in the British Journal of Sports Medicine show that exercise can improve the quality of life for these patients, benefitting their health and functionality while reducing the number of persistent symptoms, such as muscle pain and weakness. 

Long COVID (also known as post-COVID-19 syndrome) affects more than 40% of people who contract the disease. The symptoms, defined as persistent if they last more than 12 weeks, include low cardiorespiratory fitness, impaired functional capacity, reduced muscle mass, anxiety and depression. Scientific evidence suggests the syndrome is most frequent among survivors of severe COVID-19.

Taking into consideration the therapeutic potential of physical activity for people with cardiovascular, metabolic, respiratory and mental disorders, researchers at the university’s medical school (FM-USP) designed a remote exercise training program to mitigate these symptoms in 50 patients over the age of 45 who had been treated between three and six months previously for severe COVID-19 in the intensive care unit of Hospital das Clínicas, the hospital complex run by FM-USP.

The 16-week home-based training program consisted mainly of functional capacity exercises in three weekly sessions of 60-80 minutes. One session was supervised remotely by an instructor via video call. The other two were overseen by means of systematized follow-up reports. The complexity, duration and intensity of the exercises were adjusted for each patient in accordance with their limitations on the Post-COVID Functional Scale (PCFS).

All participants underwent cardiorespiratory and functional assessments in the university’s laboratory. They also received leaflets with instructions on how to perform the exercises, recommended precautions, and suggestions for use of chairs or buckets of water for resistance training, among others.

At the end, health-related quality of life was evaluated using the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF 36), a standard scientific questionnaire covering eight domains, with scores and scales for each one (physical functioning, role limitations due to physical problems, bodily pain, general health perceptions, vitality, social functioning, role limitations due to emotional problems, and mental health). 

The results showed that the program significantly improved all the parameters analyzed. “We also observed an improvement in cardiorespiratory parameters, such as oxygen consumption and heart rate recovery, as well as a decrease in body fat and the number of persistent post-COVID symptoms, especially fatigue, muscle weakness, aches and pains,” said Hamilton Roschel, a professor at FM-USP and principal investigator for the study. 

“In sum, the program is safe, which is particularly important in remote interventions. Moreover, in this study, it achieved its objectives.”

Health and economic benefits

The researchers believe the model can be applied throughout Brazil, with public health and economic benefits that include savings for the social security system, since functionality guarantees autonomy and helps survivors of the disease return to work.

Adaptations and additional tests will be necessary. One of the difficulties to be surmounted, for example, is the low level of digital literacy and lack of internet access in large swathes of the country, hindering supervision and follow-up of remote training sessions.

“We know exercise has significant therapeutic potential for treatment of the consequences of infection by SARS-CoV-2,” Roschel said. “Public primary care centers in Brazil unfortunately don’t have enough physical education professionals and physiotherapists to provide post-COVID treatment, so we need alternative models for delivering programs that target these patients.”

FAPESP supported the study via a Thematic Project coordinated by FM-USP professor Bruno Gualano and a doctoral scholarship awarded to Igor Longobardi, first author of the article. 

The following researchers, among others, also collaborated: Karla Fabiana Goessler (postdoctoral fellow), Gersiel Nascimento de Oliveira Júnior (PhD candidate), Danilo Marcelo Leite do Prado, Jhonnatan Vasconcelos Pereira Santos, Matheus Molina Meletti (undergraduate research student), Danieli Castro Oliveira de Andrade, Saulo Gil, João Antonio Spott de Oliveira Boza and Fernanda Rodrigues Lima. 

About São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP)

The São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP) is a public institution with the mission of supporting scientific research in all fields of knowledge by awarding scholarships, fellowships and grants to investigators linked with higher education and research institutions in the State of São Paulo, Brazil. FAPESP is aware that the very best research can only be done by working with the best researchers internationally. Therefore, it has established partnerships with funding agencies, higher education, private companies, and research organizations in other countries known for the quality of their research and has been encouraging scientists funded by its grants to further develop their international collaboration. You can learn more about FAPESP at www.fapesp.br/en and visit FAPESP news agency at www.agencia.fapesp.br/en to keep updated with the latest scientific breakthroughs FAPESP helps achieve through its many programs, awards and research centers. You may also subscribe to FAPESP news agency at http://agencia.fapesp.br/subscribe.

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Study proves efficacy of remote physical training in rehabilitation of severe COVID patients

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

17 percent of U.S. households face growing water affordability challenge

2023-05-10
DURHAM, N.C. – In 787 communities served by the United States’ largest utilities, 17 percent of households struggle to afford basic water services, according to a new analysis by researchers at Duke University. Nearly half the U.S. population lives in the communities covered by the analysis, which was published May 10 in the open-access journal PLOS Water. The analysis shows that 28.3 million people in those communities live in households that spend more than one day each month working to pay for water ...

Protein nanoparticle vaccine with adjuvant improves immune response against influenza, biomedical sciences researchers find

Protein nanoparticle vaccine with adjuvant improves immune response against influenza, biomedical sciences researchers find
2023-05-10
ATLANTA—A novel type of protein nanoparticle vaccine formulation containing influenza proteins and adjuvant to boost immune responses has provided complete protection against influenza viral challenges, according to a new study published by researchers in the Institute for Biomedical Sciences at Georgia State University. The findings published in the journal Small describe a promising influenza vaccine candidate that uses adjuvants, substances that increase immune response to a vaccine, to boost effectiveness against ...

Songs of the oceans raise environmental awareness #ASA184

Songs of the oceans raise environmental awareness #ASA184
2023-05-10
CHICAGO, May 10, 2023 – For many people, there are few sounds as relaxing as ocean waves. But the sound of the seas can also convey deeper emotions and raise awareness about pollution. At the upcoming 184th Meeting of the Acoustical Society of America, Colin Malloy of Ocean Network Canada will present his method to transform ocean data into captivating, solo percussion songs. The talk, “Sonification of ocean data in art-science,” will take place Wednesday, May 10, at 3:25 p.m. in the Indiana/Iowa room. The meeting will run May 8-12 at the Chicago Marriott Downtown Magnificent Mile Hotel. To construct his compositions, Malloy employs sound from ...

Sleep apnea, lack of deep sleep linked to worse brain health

2023-05-10
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE UNTIL 4 P.M. ET, WEDNESDAY, MAY 10, 2023 MINNEAPOLIS – People who have sleep apnea and spend less time in deep sleep may be more likely to have brain biomarkers that have been linked to an increased risk of stroke, Alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline, according to new research published in the May 10, 2023, online issue of Neurology®, the medical journal of the American Academy of Neurology. The study does not prove that these sleep disturbances cause the changes ...

Virginia Tech researchers conduct proof-of-concept study on mosquito’s scent preferences

Virginia Tech researchers conduct proof-of-concept study on mosquito’s scent preferences
2023-05-10
Humans smell. Each and every person has a unique body odor. People have been using commercial products to alter their scent for generations. From soaps to perfumes, people gravitate to floral and fruity smells. Whether we think these smells are good or bad is of little consequence to mosquitoes, transmitters of diseases that kill hundreds of thousands of people each year. Additionally, mosquitoes rely on plant nectar to get some sugars needed to sustain their metabolism in addition to needing nutrients in the blood to produce eggs. And humans with nutrients and a floral scent? That’s two strikes. In spite of these scents being right under humans’ noses, the impact of ...

Older adults are more easily distracted, study reports

Older adults are more easily distracted, study reports
2023-05-10
RIVERSIDE, Calif. -- While engaged in a physical task requiring effort, such as driving a car or carrying grocery bags, older adults are more likely than younger adults to be distracted by items irrelevant to the task at hand, a University of California, Riverside, study reports. The study assessed the interaction between physical exertion and short-term memory performance when distractors were present or absent in younger and older adults.  “Action and cognition, which interact often in daily life, are sensitive to the effects of aging,” said graduate student Lilian Azer, the first author of the research paper published ...

Texas A&M Institute for Advancing Health through Agriculture seeks experts to support study on responsive agriculture

2023-05-10
College Station, Texas (May 10, 2023) – Texas A&M’s Institute for Advancing Health Through Agriculture (IHA) is spearheading a study that focuses on advancing the concept of responsive agriculture and is seeking experts and leaders in the agriculture-food value chain to serve one of its three committees. The committees, along with a recently named Task Force, will help develop a road map to achieve responsive agriculture, an agricultural system and food environment that supports health ...

How does the brain interpret taste?

How does the brain interpret taste?
2023-05-10
NORMAN, OKLA. – Taste is a complex neurological experience that has the potential to provide extensive, and perhaps surprising, information on how the brain makes sense of sensations and the organization of brain pathways. A research project funded by the National Institutes of Health, led by Christian H. Lemon, Ph.D., an associate professor in the Department of Biology in the Dodge Family College of Arts and Sciences, aims to better understand how the brain processes taste and how those neural pathways can evolve. Taste ...

ACM and CSTA announce 2022-2023 Cutler-Bell student winners

ACM and CSTA announce 2022-2023 Cutler-Bell student winners
2023-05-10
The Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) and the Computer Science Teachers Association (CSTA) announced four high school students were selected from among a pool of graduating high school seniors throughout the US for the  ACM/CSTA Cutler-Bell Prize in High School Computing. Eligible students applied for the award by submitting a project/artifact that engages modern technology and computer science. A panel of judges selected the recipients based on the ingenuity, complexity, relevancy, and originality of their projects. The Cutler-Bell Prize promotes ...

Abdominal aortic aneurysm: new treatment may reduce size; COVID infection may speed growth

2023-05-10
Research Highlights Abdominal aortic aneurysm, a weakening and ballooning of the aorta, the largest blood vessel in the body, may result in a life-threatening rupture. In a small, preliminary study examining a potential treatment to keep small abdominal aortic aneurysms from growing to a dangerous size, intravenous administration of immune-modulating cells resulted in a significant decrease in pro-inflammatory cells, and with higher doses, there was a decrease in aneurysm size. In a separate small study, people with abdominal aortic aneurysms ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

More social species live longer, Oxford study finds

Magicians don’t mind sharing the secrets behind tricks – if they are their own

No incentive for older birds to make new friends

Development and validation of a new prognostic model for predicting survival outcomes in patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure

Identification and validation of the Hsa_circ_0001726/miR-140-3p/KRAS axis in hepatocellular carcinoma based on microarray analyses and experiments

New study warns that melting Arctic sea-ice could affect global ocean circulation

Researchers test imlifidase enzyme versus plasma exchange in removing donor-specific antibodies in kidney transplant rejection trial

Preclinical studies test novel gene therapy for treating IgA nephropathy

Trial assesses antibody therapy for chronic active antibody-mediated kidney transplant rejection

High-impact clinical trials generate promising results for improving kidney health: Part 2

Expression of carbonic anhydrase IX as a novel diagnostic marker for differentiating pleural mesothelioma from non-small cell lung carcinoma

In silico assessment of photosystem I P700 chlorophyll a apoprotein A2 (PsaB) from Chlorella vulgaris (green microalga) as a source of bioactive peptides

Association between TLR10 rs10004195 gene polymorphism and risk of Helicobacter pylori infection

The usefulness of matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry in the diagnosis of onychomycosis in patients with nail psoriasis

Liver characterization of a cohort of alpha-1 antitrypsin deficiency patients with and without lung disease

Anti-hepatitis b virus treatment with tenofovir amibufenamide has no impact on blood lipids: A real-world, prospective, 48-week follow-up study

Scientists uncover workings of “batons” in biomolecular relay inside cells

Do certain diabetes drugs increase the risk of acute kidney injury in patients taking anti-cancer therapies?

Researchers integrate multiple protein markers to predict health outcomes in individuals with chronic kidney disease

How the novel antibody felzartamab impacts IgA nephropathy

Heart and kidney outcomes after canagliflozin treatment in older adults

Slowing ocean current could ease Arctic warming -- a little

Global, national, and regional trends in the burden of chronic kidney disease among women

Scientific discovery scratching beneath the surface of itchiness

SFSU psychologists develop tool to assess narcissism in job candidates

Invisible anatomy in the fruit fly uterus

Skeletal muscle health amid growing use of weight loss medications

The Urban Future Prize Competition awards top prizes to Faura and Helix Earth Technologies and highlights climate adaptation solutions with the inaugural Future Resilience Prize

Wayne State researcher secures two grants from the National Institute on Aging to address Alzheimer’s disease

NFL’s Bears add lifesavers to the chain of survival in Chicago

[Press-News.org] Study proves efficacy of remote physical training in rehabilitation of severe COVID patients
A program developed by researchers at the USP included three weekly sessions of up to 80 minutes each for 16 weeks, with positive effects on cardiorespiratory fitness, lung function, functional capacity, body composition and persistent