Clinical case
The patient was a 62-year-old female, she was healthy, and did not have any chronic diseases. She started with intense precordial pain, which irradiated to the left scapular region, in association with progressive dyspnea which worsened on exertion, orthopnea, and paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnea.
She was admitted with a hypertensive emergency; therefore, a chest X-ray was taken which revealed thoracic aorta dilatation. A computed tomography angiography was also taken, which demonstrated a DeBakey III-B aortic dissection, with extension to the rise of the left subclavian and right iliac artery, with a rupture in the distal aortic arch.
She underwent a hybrid procedure, which was performed in two phases. First, a left subclavian-carotid bypass with an 8 mm woven Dacron graft, under a cervical approach and then a retroperitoneal approach of the iliac vessels through hockey stitch incision, with a WD 10 mm graft implantation, a Valiant Captivia stent was placed in aortic archs, zone 1, which covered the thoracic aorta 3 cm above the diaphragm. The angiographic control was successful.
Four days later, she was discharged, with no complications at that moment. Unfortunately, sometime later, she developed motor weakness, predominantly in her left lower limb, and exertion dyspnea which limited her professional activities and daily life.
Therefore, she joined our cardiac rehabilitation program, the initial stress test revealed only chronotropic incompetence. Thus, she was classified as high risk due to chronotropic incompetence, abnormal heart rate, and abnormal systolic blood pressure recovery.
She was prescribed with 24 sessions of aerobic and anaerobic training, with a 96 bpm heart rate target, BORG 12, double product target of 12,840, and a 4 metabolic equivalents of tasks load. After the 24 sessions, a new stress test was performed to evaluate the programs impact.
The training sessions were performed as follows.
Aerobic exercise. Training sessions on a treadmill were performed, within the pre-established risk and sufficiency parameters, with a workload progression of 3.3 Mets to 5.3 during sessions. The maximum heart rate average of 95 bpm (99% of prescribed) and double maximum product average of 10,393 (83% of prescribed). There were no cardiovascular adverse events during training sessions.
Anaerobic exercise. Strength, equilibrium, coordination and elasticity with resistance bands, Swiss ball, and closed kinetic chain training sessions were performed. They were divided into warm-up, progressive anaerobic exercise in number of reps, and/or load and cooling phase. At the end of the program, there was an improvement in muscular strength per Daniels scale. There was also improvement in orthotic symmetry, tolerance to resistance changes, and a decrease of muscular contracture per Ellys test. All sessions were performed within pre-established risk parameters with no adverse events on training sessions.
An initial stress test was operated to know the patients cardiovascular state and exercise tolerance. The final stress test focused in knowing the training programs impact, both with modified Bruces protocol with maximal symptoms, results are shown in Table 1 and Fig. 1.
Initial | Final | Change | |
---|---|---|---|
Date | 06.10.16 | 16.11.16 | 40 days |
Exercise time (min) | 10:05 | 14:55 | 4:50 |
METs | 7.0 | 10.2 | 3.2 |
Basal HR (bpm) | 83 | 68 | −15 |
Maximum HR (bpm) | 108 | 111 | 3 |
Reserve HR (bpm) | 35 | 43 | 8 |
Chronotropic response | 3.4 | 4.2 | 0.8 |
HR recovery (bpm on 1st min) | 6 | 6 | 0 |
Maximum DP | 16,200 | 14,430 | 1770 |
Therefore, it was concluded that the patient achieved an adequate tolerance to exercise and good progression on load work, which is objectively reflected on the actual stress-test at the programs conclusion. Its safety was finally observed since there were no major cardiovascular events.
Discussion
The aortic dissection index register in the general population is limited. Some studies suggest 2.6-3.5 cases/100,000 people a year. There are predisposing factors such as hypertension, tobacco addiction, dyslipidemia, illicit drug abuse (cocaine, crack), hereditary factor, congenital anomalies specifically Marfan syndrome, bicuspid aortic valve, aortic coarctation, and inflammatory diseases1-3.
The acute aortic syndrome is a modern term that embraces dissection, intramural hematoma, and symptomatic aortic ulcer. Classically, aortic dissections require a tear at the intima tunic that is preceded with degeneration and cystic tunica media necrosis. The dissections spread can be in an anterograde or retrograde manner, which may cause complications such as reversed arterial perfusion syndrome (TRAP), cardiac tamponade, or valvular insufficiency1-3.
Aortic dissection is classified per 2 schemes: DeBakey that categorizes dissections per its origin and extension, DeBakey I: dissections origin is at the ascending aorta and extends from there distally to aortic arch and descending aorta, DeBakey II: dissection origins and limits to ascending aorta, and DeBakey III: dissection origins on descending aorta and extends distally, (IIIa: limited to descending thoracic aorta; IIIb: extends beneath diaphragm). Stanfords stratification system divides dissection in: Type A: ascending aorta; Type B: dissections that do not involve ascending aorta1-3.
It has been considered, even with insufficient scientific evidence, that sudden arterial blood pleasure rises could temporarily increase aortic dissection risk and its frequency in a patient with a previous dissection. That is why it seemed reasonable to decrease physical activities in these patients4. However, recent recommendations indicate that patients who had their aorta repaired must do a moderate physical activity with a 3-5 met intensity, 30 min/day 5 times a week, which assists in a better arterial blood pressure control, cardiovascular health, and a better emotional state5.
Many authors have mainly demonstrated that moderate-intensity supervised training programs are safe and in addition, improve cardiovascular and mental health in post-aortic dissection patients4-6. Some patients have demonstrated that even intense exercise may be safe7.
Chaddha et al., after an extensive review, concluded that although there are not many facts about aortic dissection survivors training programs safety, it is advisable to perform, since it improves cardiovascular and mental health. Furthermore, they mention that post-aortic dissection patients must be evaluated frequently, to identify adverse signs and symptoms during training sessions, and these facts must be used to adjust medical treatment and major exercise intensity, to enable a better cardiovascular function. It is also recommended that the first training sessions should be supervised by a qualified health personnel4.
Delsart et al. showed that a cardiopulmonary stress test is safe in post-aortic dissection patients, including both types A and B. They also demonstrated that these patients have great alterations in functional capacity, primarily due to chronotropic incompetence, peripheral deconditioning, and fear to exercise, which could deteriorate physical capacity even more. For that reason, physical activity is recommended. Training in these patients must be encouraged and supervised in specialized centers to enhance exercise tolerance and to subsequently recommend the integration of these activities in their daily life5.
Conclusions
Post-aortic dissection patients suffer an important physical and mental deterioration, much of this is related to low effort tolerance, which is why various authors have proven that physical training programs such as methods for exercise prescription (cardiopulmonary stress test) are safe and recommended to patients with this pathology. Although most of these studies have been done in patients with Type A aortic dissection, even more patients with other types of aortic dissection are included, the recommendation of first training sessions supervision remains consistent. Nevertheless, there is evidence of the benefits of these programs and it remains a low reference for the inclusion of patients in cardiac rehabilitation.