4.3 Article

Efficacy of high-intensity aerobic exercise on common multiple sclerosis symptoms

Journal

ACTA NEUROLOGICA SCANDINAVICA
Volume 145, Issue 2, Pages 229-238

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ane.13540

Keywords

aerobic training; exercise therapy; fatigue; rehabilitation

Funding

  1. Jascha Foundation
  2. Foundation for Research in Neurology
  3. Danish Multiple Sclerosis Society [A34935]
  4. Aase and Ejnar Danielsens Foundation
  5. Knud and Edith Eriksens Foundation
  6. Augustinus Foundation
  7. Direktor Emil C. Hertz og Hustru Inger Hertz' Fond
  8. Else and Mogens Wedell-Wedellsborgs Foundation
  9. Karen A. Tolstrups Foundation

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The study found that progressive aerobic exercise has a significant reduction in fatigue impact for multiple sclerosis patients, with small effects on walking and quality of life. Further confirmation is needed in future trials due to study limitations.
Objectives Fatigue and walking impairment are disabling symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS). We investigated the effects of progressive aerobic exercise (PAE) on fatigue, walking, cardiorespiratory fitness (VO(2)max), and quality of life in people with MS (pwMS). Materials & Methods Randomized controlled trial (1:1 ratio, stratified by sex) with a 24-week crossover follow-up and intention-to-treat analysis. Allocation to an exercise (24 weeks of PAE followed by self-guided physical activity) and a waitlist (24 weeks of habitual lifestyle followed by PAE) group. PAE comprised two supervised sessions per week; 30-60 min, 65-95% of maximum heart rate. Fatigue impact (Modified Fatigue Impact Scale; MFIS) and severity (Fatigue Severity Scale; FSS), walking ability (12-item MS Walking Scale; MSWS-12) and capacity (Six-Minute Walk Test; 6MWT, Six Spot Step Test; SSST), quality of life (Short Form 36 health survey; SF-36), and VO(2)max were measured at baseline, 24 weeks, and 48 weeks. Results Eighty-six pwMS were enrolled. Following PAE between-group differences showed reductions in MFIStotal (-5.3 [95% CI: -10.9;0.4], point estimate >clinical relevance), MFISphysical subscore (-2.8 [-5.6;-0.1]), and MFISpsychosocial subscore (-0.9 [-1.6;-0.2]), and an increase in VO(2)max (+3.5 ml O-2/min/kg [2.0;5.1]). MSWS-12 (-5.9 [-11.9; 0.2]) and 6MWT (+14 m [-5;33]) differences suggested potential small walking improvements. No changes observed in FSS, SSST, or SF-36. Conclusions In a representative sample of pwMS, PAE induced a clinically relevant reduction in fatigue impact, whereas small and no effects were seen for walking and quality of life, respectively. The results need confirmation in a future trial due to the study limitations.

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