Aerobic exercise reduces systolic blood pressure by 4.9 to 12 mmHg and improves clinical outcomes in outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors, chronic coronary disease, heart failure, diabetes, and cancer.
Outpatients with chronic conditions including cardiovascular disease, heart failure, diabetes, and cancer, with particular emphasis on pre-exercise evaluation in patients with hypertension-related organ damage, decompensated heart failure, and frailty.
Personalized exercise prescription and training programs
This review provides a practical framework for healthcare providers to prescribe personalized exercise programs for patients with chronic cardiovascular and metabolic conditions.
Exercise training represents a cornerstone therapeutic intervention for managing chronic health conditions, yet its practical implementation in clinical settings remains suboptimal due to challenges in individualization and safety considerations across diverse patient populations. This narrative review provides practical guidelines for exercise prescription in outpatients with chronic conditions, grounded in recent international recommendations and current scientific evidence. Practical considerations for exercise prescription are addressed across various chronic conditions including cardiovascular disease, heart failure, diabetes, and cancer, with particular emphasis on pre-exercise evaluation in patients with hypertension-related organ damage, decompensated heart failure, and frailty. Exercise prescription should be personalized and adapted to individual health status through gradual and progressive incremental physical activity programs designed to optimize health outcomes while minimizing risks. Social, psychological, environmental factors, and technology integration represent important determinants of adherence that warrant systematic consideration. The successful translation of exercise prescriptions into effective training programs requires dedicated clinical facilities staffed by specialized professionals who can bridge the gap between prescription and implementation.
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Komici et al. (Mon,) conducted a review in Outpatients with chronic conditions including cardiovascular risk factors, chronic coronary disease, heart failure, diabetes, and cancer requiring exercise prescription. Exercise training (aerobic, resistance, flexibility, balance, and high intensity intermittent training) vs. Sedentary or standard care/no exercise was evaluated on Reduction in blood pressure, improvement in cardiovascular events, hospitalizations, quality of life, mortality, and functional capacity (Systolic BP reduction ranged from −4.9 to −12 mmHg with aerobic exercise). Aerobic exercise reduces systolic blood pressure by 4.9 to 12 mmHg and improves clinical outcomes in outpatients with cardiovascular risk factors, chronic coronary disease, heart failure, diabetes, and cancer.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69a91cf1d6127c7a504bfd39 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2026.1649549
Klara Komici
Antonio Bianco
Alessandra Cuomo
Frontiers in Sports and Active Living
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
University of Padua
University of Naples Federico II
University of Verona
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