Categories: Blog

Cardiac Rehab: An Important Tool in the Treatment and Prevention of Cardiovascular Disease

What Is Cardiac Rehab?

For patients who have recently had a heart attack, undergone angioplasty or stent placement, had recent cardiac surgery, or have heart failure, cardiac rehab is an important part of recovery. Cardiac rehab programs focus on improving cardiac outcomes through monitored exercise, diet and lifestyle counseling, and working on stress reduction. Qualifying patients who participate in cardiac rehab programs have decreased mortality from any cause five years after their cardiac event and also have significantly improved functional capacity, exercise tolerance, and quality of life.

As part of a cardiac rehab program, patients will not only engage in supervised exercise but will also receive education about medication adherence, dietary recommendations, smoking cessation, and stress management techniques. Furthermore, the providers at cardiac rehab work with patients to identify and overcome reasons why they may not be adherent to treatment for their cardiac disease or to lifestyle changes known to be important in preventing recurrent cardiac events. These interventions also help to reduce the risk factors that lead to cardiovascular diseases, such as high blood pressure, high cholesterol, diabetes, smoking, and being overweight.

Given the multifaceted nature of the services offered, the cardiac rehab team is similarly multifaceted and is often made up of doctors, nurses, therapists, nutritionists, exercise physiologists, and pharmacists. In fact, studies have shown that comprehensive cardiac rehab programs that involve providers from across these disciplines have better outcomes as measured by better exercise capacity in their patients, fewer recurrent hospitalizations, and improved mortality.

In patients with heart failure, a large study has shown that attending cardiac rehab and engaging in exercise training is not only safe but also improved quality of life and also resulted in a trend towards fewer hospitalizations and reduced all-cause mortality. In light of this and other promising data, the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart Association has recently given the highest class recommendation (Class I, Level of Evidence A) to include cardiac rehab in the care of patients with symptomatic chronic, stable heart failure as well as patients with recent coronary vascular events or recent cardiac surgery.

Frequently Asked Questions about Cardiac Rehab

How do I start a cardiac rehab program?

Ask your cardiologist if you qualify for a cardiac rehab program. He or she will need to send a referral to a cardiac rehab program for you.

What are local cardiac rehab programs?

There are some local cardiac rehab programs:
Suburban Hospital
Medstar Washington Hospital Center
INOVA
admin_cac

Recent Posts

Returning to Competitive Play After COVID Infection, When Is It Safe?

While Long COVID is an established source of chronic disability months after COVID infection, active…

3 years ago

Long-COVID-19–Integrative Approach to Prevention and Treatment

Long-COVID names and definitions have evolved. The National Institutes of Health refers to post-acute sequelae…

3 years ago

Get Vaccinated! Cardiac Disease Puts You at Higher Risk for COVID-19

From the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, there was strong evidence that people with…

4 years ago

What is Integrative Cardiology?

In simple terms, Integrative Cardiology is good cardiology. It applies the philosophy of integrative medicine…

4 years ago

Pulmonary Emboli

Pulmonary emboli (PE) are blood clots that occur in the arteries that carry blood from…

4 years ago

Holiday heart syndrome: Still a risk even if the holidays look different this year

This year has upended the way we normally celebrate the big occasions in our lives…

4 years ago

This website uses cookies.