Abstract
Introduction: Animal data suggest that remote ischaemic conditioning (RIC)
can improve blood flow in ischaemic limbs and, consequently, may benefit
claudication patients Supervised exercise is the preferred first-line intervention
for patients with intermittent claudication (IC) but is constrained by limited
availability and logistical issues, particularly in rural settings
Aim: To evaluate Remote ischaemic preconditioning in management of
intermittent claudication patients
Methods: We undertook a randomised clinical trial to evaluate RICs
effect in claudication patients. Stable IC patients were randomly allocated
to receive RIC alone, structured resistance exercise (SE) alone, RIC plus
SE or to a control group which received standard advice and risk factor
modification. Patients received their intervention over a 28-day period.
RIC patients attended an RIC clinic every 3 to 4 days to undergo 4 cycles
of 5 minutes upper limb ischaemia followed by 5 minutes reperfusion
induced with a standard blood pressure cuff
Results: 45 patients were randomised, of whom 40 completed the trial (10
patients per group). The RIC alone, SE alone and RIC plus SE groups all
demonstrated significant improvements in pain-free walking distance and
ankle-brachial pressure indices at 30 days. There were no differences in
the magnitude of improvements between the groups
Conclusion: Compare with standard care RIC is promising as a homedelivered intervention. It appears to be equivalent to SE in the treatment
of IC. with no apparent additive benefit to combining the two interventions in this small size sample. large scale RCT is needed for validation
| Original language | English (Ireland) |
|---|---|
| Title of host publication | XLIIIrd Sir Peter Freyer Memorial Lecture and Surgical Symposium |
| Publication status | Published - 1 Sep 2018 |
Authors (Note for portal: view the doc link for the full list of authors)
- Authors
- Ahmed, K; Hernon, S; Mohammed, S; Tubassum, M; Newell, M; Walsh, S