Alexandra Barriault, Umair Iftikhar, James A Stone
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Cardiac Rehabilitation and Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction: Pathophysiology, Benefits, and Precautions.
Heart failure (HF) is a highly comorbid condition associated with significant mortality, despite advances in current medical management. Patients who suffer from HF represent a high needs disease care population in whom structured, long-term chronic disease care delivery models, such as cardiac rehabilitation (CR), have been shown to be highly cost effective in reducing hospitalizations and improving quality of life. HF with reduced ejection fraction affects a growing number of Canadians and health care costs secondary to this condition are increasing, with further increases over the next decade to be expected. CR is a guideline-directed medical therapy for patients living with HF with reduced ejection fraction, and with increasing numbers of HF patients across the world, there is a prescient need to revisit the benefits, safety, and the prescription of this intervention for the health care professionals who treat this condition. Certainly, there is a clinical need for HF practitioners to better understand the pathophysiological benefits of CR with respect to exercise training, as well as the prudent precautions required to facilitate the safe delivery of this highly cost-effective patient intervention.
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of Cardiology (CJC) is the official journal of the Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS). The CJC is a vehicle for the international dissemination of new knowledge in cardiology and cardiovascular science, particularly serving as the major venue for Canadian cardiovascular medicine.