Summary of the best evidence for risk stratification of exercise rehabilitation in patients with a cardiac implantable electronic device

Front Cardiovasc Med. 2024 Nov 25:11:1455486. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2024.1455486. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Background: Hierarchical management of sports risk is highly critical to ensure the safety of sports rehabilitation. Early identification, timely prevention and control of sports-related risk factors, and enhanced supervision and guidance can provide a basis for the formulation of sports programmes and the setting of sports monitoring levels.

Objective: This study aimed to retrieve, evaluate, and integrate evidence for the stratified management of motor risk in patients with a cardiac implantable electronic device (CIED).

Methods: We searched for evidence according to the "6S" model of evidence-based resources. CNKI, VIP, Wanfang Data, CBM, PubMed, Cochrane Iibrary, CINAHL, EMbase, Web of Science, BMJ Best Practice, Up To Date, and International Guidelines Collaboration Network were searched from inception to February 2024. To search for evidence on stratified management of motor risk in patients with CIEDs, this research includes guidelines, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, expert consensus, clinical decision-making, and randomized controlled trials. After methodological quality evaluation, the evidence was extracted and summarized accordingly.

Results: According to the inclusion and exclusion criteria, 16 pieces of evidence were screened, including 5 guidelines, 1 clinical decision-making, 5 systematic reviews, 4 expert consensus, and 1 randomized controlled trial. After reading, extracting, and categorizing, 34 pieces of evidence in 4 areas were identified, namely, screening and assessment of exercise risk in CIEDs, exercise monitoring, implementation of exercise prescriptions, and prevention and management of exercise-related risks.

Conclusions: This study provides the best evidence for the prevention and management of exercise risk in patients with CIEDs, clarifies the role of nurses in evaluating, monitoring, and educating patients undergoing motor rehabilitation, and provides a basis for the formulation of clinically feasible rehabilitation programs.

Systematic review registration: PROSPERO, identifier (CRD2024509622).

Keywords: best evidence summary; cardiac implantable electronic device; evidence-based nursing; exercise rehabilitation; risk stratification.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This work was supported by the First Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University Nursing Research Special Youth Fund [grant numbers HLKY2023020], Key Research Project of Colleges and Universities of Henan Province [grant numbers 23A320055] and Chinese Nursing Association 2023 Research Project [grant numbers ZHKY202316].