Effects of Walking Exercise at a Pace With Versus Without Ischemic Leg Symptoms on Functional Performance Measures in People With Lower Extremity Peripheral Artery Disease: The LITE Randomized Clinical Trial.
Author
Hammond, Michael MSpring, Bonnie
Rejeski, W Jack
Sufit, Robert
Criqui, Michael H
Tian, Lu
Zhao, Lihui
Xu, Shujun
Kibbe, Melina R
Leeuwenburgh, Christiaan
Manini, Todd
Forman, Daniel E
Treat-Jacobson, Diane
Polonsky, Tamar S
Bazzano, Lydia
Ferrucci, Luigi
Guralnik, Jack
Lloyd-Jones, Donald M
McDermott, Mary M
Date
2022-07-27Journal
Journal of the American Heart AssociationPublisher
American Heart AssociationType
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background In people with peripheral artery disease, post hoc analyses of the LITE (Low Intensity Exercise Intervention in Peripheral Artery Disease) randomized trial were conducted to evaluate the effects of walking exercise at a pace inducing ischemic leg symptoms on walking velocity and the Short Physical Performance Battery, compared with walking exercise without ischemic leg symptoms and compared with a nonexercising control group. Methods and Results Participants with peripheral artery disease were randomized to: home-based walking exercise that induced ischemic leg symptoms; home-based walking exercise conducted without ischemic leg symptoms; or a nonexercising control group for 12 months. Outcomes were change of walking velocity over 4 m and change of the Short Physical Performance Battery (0-12, with 12=best) at 6- and 12-month follow-up. A total of 264 participants (48% women, 61% Black race) were included. Compared with walking exercise without ischemic symptoms, walking exercise that induced ischemic symptoms improved change in usual-paced walking velocity over 4 m at 6-month (0.056 m/s [95% CI, 0.019-0.094 m/s]; P<0.01) and 12-month follow-up (0.084 m/s [95% CI, 0.049-0.120 m/s]; P<0.01), change in fast-paced of walking velocity over 4 m at 6-month follow-up (P=0.03), and change in the Short Physical Performance Battery at 12-month follow-up (0.821 [95% CI, 0.309-1.334]; P<0.01). Compared with control, walking exercise at a pace inducing ischemic symptoms improved change in usual-paced walking velocity over 4 m at 6-month follow-up (0.066 m/s [95% CI, 0.021-0.111 m/s]; P<0.01). Conclusions In people with peripheral artery disease, those who walked for exercise at a comfortable pace without ischemic leg symptoms slowed their walking speed during daily life and worsened the Short Physical Performance Battery score, a potentially harmful effect, compared with people who walked for exercise at a pace inducing ischemic leg symptoms. Compared with a control group who did not exercise, home-based walking exercise at a pace inducing ischemic leg symptoms significantly improved change of walking velocity over 4 m at 6-month follow-up, but this benefit did not persist at 12-month follow-up. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT02538900.Identifier to cite or link to this item
http://hdl.handle.net/10713/19511ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1161/JAHA.121.025063