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Feasibility of High-Intensity Interval Nordic Walking in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease
Sponsor: Ottawa Heart Institute Research Corporation
Summary
Coronary revascularization, such as heart bypass surgery (CABG) and percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI \[inserting a stent to open up blood vessels\]) improve survival for people with coronary artery disease. Yet, many patients suffer from poor physical and mental health after coronary revascularization. Traditional cardiac rehabilitation involving moderate-to-vigorous intensity continuous training (MICT) improves physical and mental health. However, alternative exercise programs, such as high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and Nordic walking may provide superior benefits. Nordic walking is like Nordic skiing but uses specifically designed poles for walking. Nordic walking involved core, upper and lower body muscles, resulting in greater energy expenditure while reducing loading stress at the knee. To date, HIIT used in cardiac rehabilitation settings has focused on lower body (e.g., leg cycling). The investigators are not aware of HIIT protocols that target both upper and lower body at the same time. An exercise program that combines HIIT and Nordic walking (HIIT-NoW) may offer an alternative time-efficient whole-body exercise to improve physical and mental health. This study will test if HIIT-NoW can be an alternative exercise option to improve physical and mental health in patients with coronary artery disease.
Official title: Feasibility and Preliminary Efficacy of High-intensity Interval Nordic Walking in Patients With Coronary Artery Disease: A Pilot Randomized Clinical Trial (HIIT-NoW)
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
40 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
40
Start Date
2022-12-09
Completion Date
2026-04
Last Updated
2026-03-11
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
High-intensity interval Nordic walking
Participants will complete supervised exercise sessions twice weekly for 10 weeks. Exercise specialists will educate participants in proper use of walking poles and basic Nordic walking techniques and supervise the exercise training sessions. HIIT-NoW will be 45 min in duration using Nordic poles and consists of (i) a 10-min warm-up at 30-59% heart rate reserve (HRR, light-to-moderate intensity); (ii) 4 × 4 min of high-intensity work periods at 60-89% HRR (vigorous intensity) interspersed with 3 min of low-intensity work periods at 30-59% HRR (light-to-moderate intensity); and, (iii) a 10-min cooldown at 30-39% HRR (light intensity). To allow participants to acclimatize to the HIIT-NoW protocol, the training intensity will target 60-69% HRR for the first week, 70-79% HRR in the second week, and 80-89% HRR from the third week onward. If participants do not tolerate 89% HRR well, they will exercise as close to 89% HRR as possible.
Standard cardiovascular rehabilitation
Individuals assigned to standard CR will attend onsite exercise-based CR comprised of one onsite exercise session per week for 8-10 weeks. The onsite CR offers exercise sessions tailored to the fitness of patients and strengthening exercise.
Locations (1)
University of Ottawa Heart Institute
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada