Release Date: Feb. 22, 2005
EXERCISE THERAPY
BUILDS STRENGTH, MOBILITY IN MS PATIENTS
By Becky Ham, Science Writer
Health Behavior News Service
Exercise therapy can improve muscle strength, mobility and other signs of
fitness in people with multiple sclerosis, according to a recent review of
studies.
Nine high quality studies provide strong evidence that exercise therapy can
make a difference in the daily living and quality of life of those with the
disease, say Dr. Bernard Uitdehaag and colleagues of the Vrije Universitei
Medical Centre in the Netherlands.
Exercise therapy also improved the
mood of MS patients in exercise therapy programs, compared to patients who
did not participate in the therapy. The
researchers did not find any evidence that exercise therapy affected patients’ fatigue
or their sense of how ill they were.
Despite the evidence supporting
exercise for MS patients, however, Uitdehaag says it’s too early to
recommend systematic referral of patients for exercise training.
So far, there is no clear indication of how much exercise is beneficial for
people who have various types of the degenerative disease, Uitdehaag explains.
Only patients who seem able to exercise and who are sufficiently motivated
to train should begin the therapy, he says.
“Patients for exercise training should also be referred to therapists
with sufficient experience in treating MS patients,” Uitdehaag says.
The review appears in the January issue of The Cochrane Library, a publication
of The Cochrane Collaboration, an international organization that evaluates
medical research. Systematic reviews draw evidence-based conclusions about
medical practice after considering both the content and quality of existing
medical trials on a topic.
Multiple sclerosis is a degenerative nerve disease that damages the protective
fatty sheath around nerves in the brain and spinal cord. Some patients experience
a pattern of disease flare-up followed by disease free periods, while others
may have a steady worsening of the disease over time. According to the Multiple
Sclerosis Foundation, between 350,000 and 500,000 people in the United States
currently have multiple sclerosis.
“No intervention has proven effective in modifying long-term disease
prognosis in multiple sclerosis, but exercise therapy is considered to be an
important part of symptomatic and supportive treatment for these patients,” Uitdehaag
says.
Exercise therapy probably does not
affect the disease process itself, according to co-author Dr. Gert Kwakkel.
He says exercise may help “patients learn
to compensate (for) their existing deficits. Systematic physical training may
reduce disuse, in particular for those who suffer from fatigue.”
The average of age of patients in the reviewed studies ranged from 34 to 51
years old, with varying types and severities of multiple sclerosis. The researchers
suggest future studies should include a greater number of older individuals,
severely disabled patients and patients who have been living with the disease
for more than 18 years.
The studies also included a wide range of exercise programs and definitions
of improved health and fitness, making it difficult to decide what kinds of
exercise are best for MS patients. Uitdehaag and colleagues found no evidence
that any specific exercise therapy programs were better for health and mobility
than other exercise programs.
The researchers also found no signs in any of the studies that exercise therapy
was harmful to the health of MS patients. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society
suggests that MS patients exercise with frequent rest breaks, since heat can
aggravate MS symptoms.
“With this type of exercise-rest-exercise patterns, physical therapy
may be quite effective, with very good results,” according to the Society’s
recommendations.
1 M.B. Rietberg et al.
Exercise therapy for multiple sclerosis (Review. The Cochrane Database of
Systematic Reviews 2005, Issue 1
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