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The Perfect Step is the first one: Improving the quality of life for patients with spinal cord injuries through structured exercise.
Journal of Spinal Cord Medicine 2024 April 9
CONTEXT: More than 1 million people live with spinal cord injuries (SCI) in the United States alone. Despite research suggesting improvement in functional activities in patients who participate in regular physical activity, there is limited data on the specific impact of exercise as it pertains to patient-reported quality-of-life (QoL) measures of mood, pain, independence, or medical complications. Patients with SCI participating in a longitudinal exercise program at a community-based fitness facility (The Perfect Step) in Pomona, California were invited to participate in this study. This program consisted of at least two hours a week of exercise-based therapy, loadbearing, and neuroplasticity retraining for two years. Participants were asked to retrospectively rate patient-reported quality-of-life outcomes at the start of participation in the program, and at 6, 12, and 24 months after the program start as measured by an 89-item SCI QoL questionnaire covering domains including mood (39 items), pain (16 items), independence (7 items), bladder function (14 items), and pressure ulcers (13 items). 24 patients with SCI (16 cervical, 4 thoracic, 3 lumbar, 1 unspecified) were included in the final analysis.
FINDINGS: Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to compare patient-reported outcome measures over time. Patients reported statistically significantly improved outcomes across all domains at all timepoints to varying degrees, with improvement in 73/89 items at 6 months, 57/89 at 12 months, and 65/89 at 24 months after participation start (P < 0.05, all).
CONCLUSION/CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Patients with SCI engaging in a structured exercise program demonstrated sustainable, longitudinal improvements in mood, pain control, independence, and fewer impairments related to bladder function and pressure ulcers. Physicians should consider the integration of structured exercise into the rehabilitation program alongside traditional medical care to optimize the quality of life for those with SCI. Future research should involve a direct comparison of QoL in patients with SCI participating in structured exercise versus those who are not.
FINDINGS: Wilcoxon rank sum tests were used to compare patient-reported outcome measures over time. Patients reported statistically significantly improved outcomes across all domains at all timepoints to varying degrees, with improvement in 73/89 items at 6 months, 57/89 at 12 months, and 65/89 at 24 months after participation start (P < 0.05, all).
CONCLUSION/CLINICAL RELEVANCE: Patients with SCI engaging in a structured exercise program demonstrated sustainable, longitudinal improvements in mood, pain control, independence, and fewer impairments related to bladder function and pressure ulcers. Physicians should consider the integration of structured exercise into the rehabilitation program alongside traditional medical care to optimize the quality of life for those with SCI. Future research should involve a direct comparison of QoL in patients with SCI participating in structured exercise versus those who are not.
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