Review article: impact of exercise on physical frailty in patients with chronic liver disease.

Williams, Felicity R; Berzigotti, Annalisa; Lord, Janet M; Lai, Jennifer C; Armstrong, Matthew J (2019). Review article: impact of exercise on physical frailty in patients with chronic liver disease. Alimentary pharmacology & therapeutics, 50(9), pp. 988-1000. Wiley-Blackwell 10.1111/apt.15491

[img] Text
Williams_et_al-2019-Alimentary_Pharmacology_&_Therapeutics.pdf - Published Version
Restricted to registered users only
Available under License Publisher holds Copyright.

Download (683kB) | Request a copy

BACKGROUND

Physical frailty is common in chronic liver disease and the setting of liver transplantation. It is associated with poor quality of life, increased hospitalisation and mortality. Despite this, the impact of exercise in these patients remains poorly understood.

AIM

To summarise the impact of physical exercise on physical frailty in patients with chronic liver disease until after liver transplantation.

METHODS

A MEDLINE and PubMed search was undertaken using the terms; "physical activity", "functional capacity", "exercise", "prehabilitation", "frailty", "liver cirrhosis", "liver failure", "liver transplantation" "chronic liver disease" and "end-stage liver disease" from January 1990 to June 2019.

RESULTS

Eleven studies (five randomised controlled, five observational, one case study) demonstrated that exercise improves VO2 peak, anaerobic threshold, 6-minute walk distance, muscle mass/function and quality of life in patients with compensated and decompensated cirrhosis. Improvements were most significant with a combination of aerobic and resistance exercises at moderate-high intensity. The studies were small (n = 1-50) and mainly focused on supervised, hospital-based exercises, excluding patients with significant liver failure (MELD > 12). Seven studies (four randomised controlled and three observational) demonstrated that predominantly supervised (only one home-based) aerobic exercise after liver transplantation improves aerobic capacity, muscle mass/strength and quality of life. There was marked heterogeneity in timing, intensity and type of exercises.

CONCLUSION

Exercise improves key components of physical frailty (functional/aerobic capacity, sarcopenia) and quality of life in chronic liver disease and after liver transplantation. Understanding the type, compliance, intensity and duration of exercise and its impact on hard clinical outcomes should be the focus of future large controlled clinical trials.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Review Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Gastro-intestinal, Liver and Lung Disorders (DMLL) > Clinic of Visceral Surgery and Medicine > Hepatology

UniBE Contributor:

Berzigotti, Annalisa

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

0269-2813

Publisher:

Wiley-Blackwell

Language:

English

Submitter:

Thi Thao Anh Pham

Date Deposited:

08 Jan 2020 08:53

Last Modified:

05 Dec 2022 15:34

Publisher DOI:

10.1111/apt.15491

PubMed ID:

31502264

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.137256

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/137256

Actions (login required)

Edit item Edit item
Provide Feedback