Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Physical exercise in the control of pain or fatigue associated with viral infections: systematic review

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES:

Individuals after viral infections remain with persistent symptoms such as pain and fatigue. Physical exercises have been described as a promising alternative for the control of these symptoms, but there are no systematic reviews that verify the effectiveness of this therapy and that assess the quality of these studies. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of physical exercise on pain or fatigue associated with viral infections.

METHODS:

Systematic review registered with PROSPERO (CRD42021265174). Data collection was carried out between July 2021 and January 2022. Randomized clinical trials that addressed the practice of exercises, in individuals over 18 years of age, diagnosed with viral infection associated with the presence of pain or fatigue for more than 3 months were included. The search was carried out in the Pubmed, EMBASE, LILACS and Scielo databases, and the paired selection was carried out in the software (rayyan.ai); risk of bias analysis was assessed using the Cochrane risk-of-bias tool for randomized trials 2; certainty of evidence through GRADE; and for the construction of the meta-analysis, the Review Manager software.

RESULTS:

Eleven clinical trials were selected in populations with acquired immunodeficiency virus (HIV), human T-cell lymphotropic virus (HTLV), chikungunya and poliomyelitis. For both pain and fatigue, the combination of aerobic exercise with resistance training, lasting 40 to 60 minutes, two to three times a week, was effective and safe. The methodological quality of the studies showed a high risk of bias in six studies due to the following domains: bias due to deviations from the intended interventions, bias due to lack of outcome data and bias in the selection of the reported outcome; rated as some concerns in one study due to the domain bias due to deviations from intended interventions; and the others were assessed as low risk of bias. The meta-analysis showed a result in favor of the intervention group on pain intensity in the studies for Chikungunya and in a study for HTLV, which points to a positive effect in favor of the active groups.

CONCLUSION:

Exercises for the treatment of fatigue have very low evidence, while resistance exercises have moderate evidence for pain outcome. These are low-risk, low-cost resources with promising effects that should be better tested in people after viral infections.

Keywords:
Pain; Physical exercise; Fatigue; Viral infections

INTRODUCTION

At different times in human history, viral infections, whether by emerging or re-emerging viruses, have caused high rates of morbidity and mortality worldwide11 Silva LA, Soares JPA, Silva L F, Silva RR, Araújo MS, Silva MVG, Oliveira ES, Mesquita LMF, Alencar I F, Dutra VCA, Silveira MB, Norbiato VNP, Silveira MLFG, Souza MGG, Barbosa ISF, Mendonça CFS, Duque ES, Oliveira JVE, Silva SFM. Pandemias e suas repercussões sociais ao longo da história associado ao novo SARS-COV-2: um estudo de revisão. Res Soc Dev. 2021;10(3):e59110313783.. Newly emerged infectious agents initially brought an alert to local communities that spread across countries and continents, often becoming pandemics, as what happened with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) and the Coronavirus22 Zappa A, Amendola A, Romanò L, Zanetti A. Emerging and re-emerging viruses in the era of globalisation. Blood Transfus. 2009;7(3):167-71.,33 Grubaugh ND, Ladner JT, Lemey P, Pybus OG, Rambaut A, Holmes EC, Andersen KG. Tracking virus outbreaks in the twenty-first century. Nat Microbiol. 2019;4(1):10-9., 4, 55 Roychoudhury S, Das A, Sengupta P, Dutta S, Roychoudhury S, Choudhury A P, Ahmed ABF, Bhattacharjee S, Slama P. Viral pandemics of the last four decades: pathophysiology, health impacts and perspectives. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020;17(24):9411.. Even with the eforts of different segments of contemporary society, there are still cases of these infections in several countries and, even in countries with a controlled situation, many individuals remain with sequelae to be faced after the active period of infection66 Estatísticas [Internet]. UNAIDS Brasil. 2022 [cited 2022 Sep 13]. Available from: https://unaids.org.br/estatisticas/
https://unaids.org.br/estatisticas/...
,77 COVID-19 Data Explorer [Internet]. Our World in Data. [cited 2022 Sep 13]. Available from: https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer
https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/cor...
.

Most infected individuals, whether by HIV, Human T-Cell Lymphotropic Virus Type-1 (HTLV-1), Chikungunya Virus (CHIKV), Poliovirus or Coronavirus, remain with one or more symptoms, among the most common: fatigue and pain88 Azagew AW, Woreta HK, Tilahun AD, Anlay DZ. High prevalence of pain among adult HIV-infected patients at University of Gondar Hospital, Northwest Ethiopia. J Pain Res. 2017;10:2461-9., 9, 1010 Mendes SMD, Baptista AF, Sá KN, Andrade DCA, Otero GG, Cavalcanti JZ, Isensee M F, Souza I, Kruschwsky RA, Galvão-castro B. Pain is highly prevalent in individuals with tropical spastic paraparesis. Health Care. 2013;1(3):47-53., 1111 Oliveira ASB, Maynard FM. Síndrome pós-poliomielite. Rev Neurocienc. 2002;10(1):31-4., 1212 Carfì A, Bernabei R, Landi F, Gemelli Against COVID-19 Post-Acute Care Study Group. Persistent symptoms in patients after acute COVID-19. JAMA. 2020;324(6):603-5., 1313 Orrù G, Bertelloni D, Diolaiuti F, Mucci F, Di Giuseppe M, Biella M, Gemignani A, Ciacchini R, Conversano C. Long-COVID syndrome? A study on the persistence of neurological, psychological and physiological symptoms. Healthcare. 2021;9(5):575., 1414 Raveendran AV, Jayadevan R, Sashidharan S. Long COVID: An overview. Diabetes Metab Syndr. 2021;15(3):869-75.. This persistence can generate the loss of functionality with an impact on the performance of activities of daily living and on quality of life1515 Soumahoro MK, Gérardin P, Boëlle PY, Perrau J, Fianu A, Pouchot J, Malvy D, Flahault A, Favier F, Hanslik T. Impact of Chikungunya virus infection on health status and quality of life: a retrospective cohort study. PLoS One. 2009;4(11):e7800., 1616 Marimoutou C, Ferraro J, Javelle E, Deparis X, Simon F. Chikungunya infection: self-reported rheumatic morbidity and impaired quality of life persist 6 years later. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2015;21(7):688-93., 1717 Garip Y, Eser F, Bodur H, Baskan B, Sivas F, Yilmaz O. Health related quality of life in Turkish polio survivors: impact of post-polio on the health related quality of life in terms of functional status, severity of pain, fatigue, and social, and emotional functioning. Rev Bras Reumatol Engl Ed. 2017;57(1):1-7., 1818 Fontes LCDSF, Costa PJR, Fernandes JCJ, Vieira TS, Reis NC, Coimbra IMM, Paiva JAOC. The impact of severe COVID-19 on health-related quality of life and disability: an early follow-up perspective. Rev Bras The r Intensiva. 2022;34(1):141-6.. The practice of physical exercise as a therapeutic procedure has been proposed to improve these symptoms. Exercises beneft the functioning of the autonomic nervous system, promote the regeneration of the musculoskeletal and cardiopulmonary systems, improve emotional and cognitive states in the most diverse populations1919 Stonerock GL, Hoffman BM, Smith PJ, Blumenthal JA. Exercise as treatment for anxiety: systematic review and analysis. Ann Behav Med. 2015;49(4):542-56., 2020 Geneen LJ, Moore RA, Clarke C, Martin D, Colvin LA, Smith BH. Physical activity and exercise for chronic pain in adults: an overview of Cochrane Reviews. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;4(4):CD011279., 2121 Bricca A, Harris LK, Jäger M, Smith SM, Juhl CB, Skou ST. Benefts and harms of exercise therapy in people with multimorbidity: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Ageing Res Rev. 2020;63:101166., bringing well-being and biopsychosocial health. In individuals after viral infections, such as HIV, exercises have been important in controlling fatigue, increasing functional capacity and quality of life2222 Palermo PCG, Feijó OG. Exercício físico e infecção pelo HIV: atualização e recomendações. Rev Bras Fisiol Exe. 2003;2:218-46., as well as post-COVID-19, they are recommended by specialists in order for the individual to be rehabilitated from persistent symptoms of the disease2323 Wittmer VL, Paro FM, Duarte H, Capellini VK, Barbalho-Moulim MC. Early mobilization and physical exercise in patients with COVID-19: A narrative literature review. Complement Ter Clin Pract. 2021;43:101364., but there are no systematic reviews that verify the effectiveness of this therapy in the population after viral infection and that evaluate the quality of these studies. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of physical exercise on pain or fatigue associated with viral infections.

METHODS

This is a systematic review with methodological writing based on the recommendations described by the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta - Analyses - PRISMA (2020). Data collection was carried out between July 2021 and February 2022. The protocol of this systematic review was submitted to the International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO), registered with the following number: CRD42021265174.

Randomized clinical trials that addressed the practice of physical exercise in participants over 18 years of age with a diagnosis of viral infection associated with the presence of pain or fatigue for more than three months were included. Interventions not considered as physical exercises such as joint mobilization, manipulation and passive movement were excluded. Any multimodal interventions were excluded if the effect of exercise was not analyzed separately.

The search was performed in Pubmed, EMBASE, LILACS and Scielo databases. For the construction of the strategy, the PICOS methodology was used, with the descriptors referring to the population, the intervention, and the outcome, with their respective synonyms, which were obtained through active search and consultation on the MESH and DECs platforms. Subsequently, the search strategy was configured using the Boolean operators OR and AND, in order to create a search algorithm. The strategy was briefy configured as follows: ((Viral Infection) OR (Viral Disease) AND (Exercise) AND (Pain) OR (Fatigue)).

Studies were collected, identifed and organized by two researchers using the Rayyan software (rayyan.ai), which evaluated the inclusion or exclusion of articles with analysis blinding. In the first stage, title and abstract were read with the objective of verifying the congruence with the eligibility criteria or if there was duplication; in the second, articles were read in full. In cases of disagreement between the two researchers regarding the eligibility of a study, a third evaluator performed a new evaluation. To assess the reliability of study selection, the Kappa concordance index was used.

The main outcome variables analyzed were intensity and impact of pain on the participant’s life, assessed through scales or questionnaires; physical, psychological or social fatigue assessed with appropriate scales, questionnaires or tests. The articles found formed a flowchart, with the number of included and excluded in each step, as well as the reasons for exclusion. Tose included were analyzed using a pre-defined collection form, which indicate the following information for each study: author/year, population/sample, intervention, comparator, primary outcome/measurement, results and conclusion.

Risk of bias analysis was performed using the Cochrane tool risk of bias tool for randomized trials 2 (Rob 2) for included randomized controlled trials. Structured in a set of domains, focusing on the design, conduct and reporting of the study; in each domain there are questions that address the risk of bias, which generate a judgment algorithm based on responses such as “Low” or “High” risk of bias, or even “Some concerns”. The Review Manager 5.4 software (RevMan™, United Kingdom) was used to construct figures/graphs and analysis of the continuous outcome of pain intensity, which used the Visual Analog Scale (VAS) and the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) as measures. The statistical method of the inverse of variance was used, with the model of random effects and the measure of the effect of the average diference. For that, mean and standard deviation values of the first evaluation after the intervention were used. In studies that presented this value in median and interquartile range2424 Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.,2525 Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86., the research team asked authors for the mean and standard deviation values through the database or using the Hozo method2626 Hozo S P, Djulbegovic B, Hozo I. Estimating the mean and variance from the median, range, and the size of a sample. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2005;20;5:13.; which includes median, interquartile range, and sample size, validated for samples larger than 252727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.. In studies with three groups, these were divided so that each intervention group was compared to the control in isolation2424 Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.,2727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.. The Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) tool was used to assess the quality of evidence, which is very important as the usefulness of an estimate of the magnitude of the treatment effect depends directly on confdence in that estimate. Evidence is classifed as high, moderate, low or very low quality, after verifying the factors that determine the reliability of the results. This assessment was performed by a consensus of two researchers.

RESULTS

In total, 296 studies were identifed, of which 17 were duplicates. Terefore, 279 were selected for reading the title and abstract, but 262 were not congruent with the eligibility criteria. Terefore, 17 studies were selected for full reading, six of which were excluded for the following reasons: inadequate analyzed outcome2828 Hand GA, Phillips KD, Dudgeon WD, William Lyerly G, Larry Durstine J, Burgess SE. Moderate intensity exercise training reverses functional aerobic impairment in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS Care. 2008;20(9):1066-74., 2929 Facchinetti LD, Araújo AQ, Silva MT, Leite ACC, Azevedo M F, Chequer GL, Oliveira RV, Ferreira AS, Lima MA. Home-based exercise program in TSP/HAM individuals: a feasibility and effectiveness study. Arq Neuro-Psiquiatr. 2017;75(4):221-7., 3030 Nosrat S, Whitworth JW, Dunsiger SI, SantaBarbara NJ, Ciccolo J T. Acute effects of resistance exercise in a depressed HIV sample: The exercise for people who are immunocompromised (EPIC) study. Ment Health Phys Act. 2017;12:2-9., 3131 Voorn EL, Koopman FS, Brehm MA, Beelen A, de Haan A, Gerrits KHL, Nollet F. Aerobic exercise training in post-polio syndrome: process evaluation of a randomized controlled trial. PLoS One. 2016;11(7):e0159280., inadequate applied intervention3232 Lee KA, Jong S, Gay CL. Fatigue management for adults living with HIV: a randomized controlled pilot study. Res Nurs Health. 2020;43(1):56-67. and lack of a comparative group3333 Daynes E, Gerlis C, Chaplin E, Gardiner N, Singh SJ. Early experiences of rehabilitation for individuals post-COVID to improve fatigue, breathlessness exercise capacity and cognition - a cohort study. Chron Respir Dis. 2021;18:14799731211015691.. Terefore, 11 studies were selected at the end, four of which had fatigue as an outcome3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701., 3535 Oncu J, Durmaz B, Karapolat H. Short-term effects of aerobic exercise on functional capacity, fatigue, and quality of life in patients with post-polio syndrome. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(2):155-63., 3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81., 3737 Koopman FS, Voorn EL, Beelen A, Bleijenberg G, de Visser M, Brehm MA, Nollet F. No reduction of severe fatigue in patients with postpolio syndrome by exercise therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy: results of an RCT. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2016;30(5):402-10. and seven, pain2424 Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.,2525 Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86.,2727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.,3838 Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74., 3939 Parker R, Jelsma J, Stein DJ. Managing Pain in Women living with HIV/AIDS: a randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a six-week peer-led exercise and education intervention. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2016;204(9):665-72., 4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24., 4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9.. The total number of subjects who participated in the 11 included studies was 538, of which 222 were in the control group (Figure 1). The Kappa index was 0.76, which indicates a good level of agreement.

Figure 1
Study selection flowchart.

In four studies, the population consisted of individuals infected with the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV), three with Human T-Cell Lymphotropic Virus (HTLV), two with Poliomyelitis Virus and two with Chikungunya Virus (Table 1). Among the 11 studies, seven addressed physical exercises compared to the control group, with pain assessed using the Visual Analogue Scale (VAS), Visual Numerical Scale (VNS) or Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). In these studies the interventions in general were aerobic exercise, resistance exercise or a combination of the two, or the Pilates method, which have as comparators: education in pain, usual care, clinical treatment or sedentary habits.

Table 1
Characteristics of the included studies

The authors2727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9. found that aerobic exercises performed for 20 minutes at an intensity of 40% of maximum heart rate in the first weeks and 60% in the others, combined with bilateral resistance exercises of the quadriceps, hamstrings, tibialis anterior and gastrocnemius muscles, with 40% of a repetition maximum (RM) in two sets of 10 repetitions with a 3-5 second rest interval, progressing to 60% of 1RM in three sets of 10 repetitions with 2-3 second rest, with a maximum heart rate of 40-65%, for 30 minutes, every other day, 3 times a week, for 12 weeks are effective and safe to reduce neuropathic pain in individuals after HIV infection. In a similar program of aerobic exercise and muscle strengthening combined with pain education3939 Parker R, Jelsma J, Stein DJ. Managing Pain in Women living with HIV/AIDS: a randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a six-week peer-led exercise and education intervention. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2016;204(9):665-72., it was shown that both the combination of supervised exercises with educational programs, as well as the use of this last modality alone, is effective and viable in the treatment of pain in women with HIV.

In a population of individuals after Chikungunya infection, it was observed that progressive resistance exercises performed with elastic bands involving the knee, ankle, shoulder, elbow and wrist joints; in two sets of eight repetitions, totaling eight per session, twice a week, for 50 minutes, for 12 weeks, significantly reduce pain intensity4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9.. Still in this population, the Pilates method showed improvement of pain in the participants after 12 weeks of treatment, with two sessions per week of 50 minutes each, with light to moderate intensity, using a Swiss ball and elastic bands of medium intensity for strength exercises of the upper limbs, and strong intensity for stretching exercises for the muscles of the lower limbs4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24..

This method in the population of individuals with HTLV-1, with exercises performed on the Reformer on one day of the week and on the Cadillac on the second weekly session, totaling 30 sessions, is a useful tool to reduce self-reported low back pain3838 Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74.. Sensorimotor exercises applied through a virtual game coupled to a Nintendo Wii™ (Kyoto, Japan) video game did not improve pain intensity in this population2525 Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86. and may not be one of the best strategies for this purpose.

As for the fatigue outcome, it was evaluated in four studies by different instruments, such as: Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS); Fatigue Impact Scale (FIS); profile of Mood States (POMS-30) and Fatigue Severity Subscale; as well as time on the treadmill. In an HIV-infected population, aerobic training was performed for 30 minutes, at 60-80% of maximum heart rate, preceded by warm-up and followed by relaxation, three times a week for 12 weeks, safely reduced fatigue, measured by time on the treadmill3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701.. In addition, aerobic training for 30 minutes was performed, with 50-70% maximum heart rate, twice a week for six weeks; followed by resistance training of upper limbs (chest, biceps brachii, deltoids and triceps) and lower limbs (quadriceps and hamstrings), a series of 12 repetitions for 20 minutes; totaling one hour of exercise, and it significantly reduced POMS-30 scores3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81..

In people with post-polio syndrome, fexibility exercises (stretching the lumbar spine, cervical spine, upper and lower limbs) combined with aerobic training have also been shown to be beneficial in improving fatigue, both supervised and at home3535 Oncu J, Durmaz B, Karapolat H. Short-term effects of aerobic exercise on functional capacity, fatigue, and quality of life in patients with post-polio syndrome. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(2):155-63.. Also in this population, home aerobic training was tested using a cycle ergometer, combined with muscle strengthening and individually adapted functional exercises, compared to Cognitive Behavioral Terapy (CBT) and usual care; however, there was no significant diference between groups in reducing fatigue or improving activities in severely fatigued post-polio syndrome patients3737 Koopman FS, Voorn EL, Beelen A, Bleijenberg G, de Visser M, Brehm MA, Nollet F. No reduction of severe fatigue in patients with postpolio syndrome by exercise therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy: results of an RCT. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2016;30(5):402-10..

Studies that met the inclusion criteria were evaluated according to five Rob 2 domains: bias in the randomization process, deviations from intended interventions due to missing outcome data, outcome measurement, and selection of reported outcomes. Studies presented a high risk of bias in totality, in which the bias of the intended interventions was the one with the highest percentage, followed by missing outcome data and the selection of reported results (Figure 2). At the end, four articles showed a low risk of bias in all domains2525 Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86.,2727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.,4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24.,4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9., one study classified it as “some concerns”3838 Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74. and the others reported high risk of bias (Figure 3).

Figure 2
Methodological quality chart: analysis of the authors’ judgment on each study presented as a percentage.

Figure 3
Summary of methodological quality: assessment of authors’ judgments on each domain for included studies.

Eight studies with adequate randomization methods were identifed, which made clear how the process took place. However, three articles2424 Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.,3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701.,3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81., showed some concerns in this domain, either due to lack of information or inadequate methods for randomization. Five articles that contemplated the intended interventions were analyzed, while four presented items to be questioned by blinding, in which some of the interventions applied, notably, was not possible to be performed. However, two studies suggested high risk3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701.,3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81., as both the participants and the evaluators were aware of the conduct used, in addition to the fact that it was not related to the context of the study.

Among the 11 studies, one was classifed as high risk3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81. in the domain “Bias due to missing outcome data”, as it did not understand all the information from the participants’ data, and another with “some concerns” 3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701. due to the loss of these data that could probably depend on the true values. Within the domain “Bias in outcome measurement”, most studies responded positively regarding the instruments used to assess the outcome. However, in three articles, the evaluators were probably aware of the intervention received by the participants, which may have evidenced biases during the evaluation. One article showed multiple comparisons, both in measurements and in data analysis, and there was not enough information for this assessment, raising some concerns such as domain judgment3535 Oncu J, Durmaz B, Karapolat H. Short-term effects of aerobic exercise on functional capacity, fatigue, and quality of life in patients with post-polio syndrome. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(2):155-63.,3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81.,3939 Parker R, Jelsma J, Stein DJ. Managing Pain in Women living with HIV/AIDS: a randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a six-week peer-led exercise and education intervention. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2016;204(9):665-72.. At the end of the bias analysis using the Rob 2 tool, six articles were classifed as high risk, one with “some concerns” and four articles were judged as low risk, as all domains were judged with this algorithm.

For the pain intensity outcome, it was possible to include 7 studies for this meta-analysis that evaluated the effect of physical exercise in individuals with chronic pain after viral infections, with a total of 395 participants2424 Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.,2525 Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86.,2727 Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.,3838 Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74., 3939 Parker R, Jelsma J, Stein DJ. Managing Pain in Women living with HIV/AIDS: a randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a six-week peer-led exercise and education intervention. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2016;204(9):665-72., 4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24., 4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9.. Overall, there was no significant difference between the groups, despite the trend in favor of the intervention; in the HIV and HTLV subgroups there was no difference; and in the Chikungunya subgroup both studies were positive, demonstrating significant pain reduction4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24.,4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9.. Regarding the general analysis of heterogeneity, this was substantial among the analyzed studies (I2: 68%), mainly in the HTLV subgroup (I2: 71%) (Figure 4).

Figure 4
Forest-plot comparing the effect of physical exercises with a control group. SD = standard deviation; CI = confdence interval

According to the GRADE system, studies with the fatigue outcome were classifed as very low evidence both with the intervention of aerobic exercise and when resistance training was performed. For the pain outcome, aerobic exercise or it combined with resistance training were found to be of low evidence, as is the control exercise performed with the virtual reality method. However, resistance training showed moderate evidence for pain control after viral infections (Table 2).

Table 2
Quality of exercise evidence for pain and fatigue after viral infections

DISCUSSION

To the authors’ knowledge, this was the first systematic review that sought to investigate the effect of exercise on pain or fatigue after viral infections. It was possible to reveal that progressive resistance exercises combined with aerobic training promote a decrease in the intensity of pain and fatigue. Trough meta-analysis, it was shown that progressive resistance exercises are effective in reducing pain intensity in the population after Chikungunya4141 Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9. and the Pilates method is effective for pain control in the post-HTLV population (38) and Chikungunya4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24.. For fatigue, however, it was not possible to perform a meta-analysis, due to the heterogeneity of the evaluated outcomes, although in each of the four selected clinical trials, the individual results are favorable to the exercise group.

Regarding the outcome of pain intensity, substantial heterogeneity was observed between studies. The samples are small and the protocols applied are very diverse, which may explain this phenomenon. In the risk of bias analysis, faws are observed mainly in the domains related to the tested interventions, selection of reported outcomes and missing data in the applied methodology. The only population in which the metanalysis showed statistically significant results was that of Chikungunya, with a large effect size and low heterogeneity between the two included clinical trials. Strength and resistance exercise programs have demonstrated similar effects involving adults with chronic low back pain4242 Searle A, Spink M, Ho A, Chuter V. Exercise interventions for the treatment of chronic low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Clin Rehabil. 201529(12):1155-67.. Terefore, the findings confirm that pain processing is modifed through exercises, reducing the perception of intensity.

The Pilates method was applied both to the population with Chikungunya and to a group of people with HTLV-1. The results of both studies report high eficacy in reducing pain, with the largest effect sizes observed in the present meta-analysis3838 Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74.,4040 de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24.. The sessions were held twice a week, with exercises involving coordination, flexibility, control, strength and balance, performed in the rhythm of diaphragmatic breathing, respecting the principles of the method. The protocols used both the ground modality and exercises performed on equipment with springs, typical of the method.

A Pilates protocol was also compared to usual care and pharmacological treatment and showed significant improvement in chronic low back pain in adults without associated viruses. However, in this same study, when comparing Pilates with other types of exercises, a lower effectiveness was observed in the reduction of pain in the short term4343 Miyamoto GC, Costa LOP, Cabral CMN. Eficacy of the Pilates method for pain and disability in patients with chronic nonspecific low back pain: a systematic review with meta-analysis. Braz J Phys Ter. 2013;17(6):517-32.. Terefore, even though clinical trials demonstrate the effectiveness of the Pilates method, it is not possible to claim superiority over other forms of exercise4444 T P, Maher CG, Saragiotto BT, Hancock MJ, Ostelo RW, Cabral CM, Menezes Costa LC, Costa LO. Pilates for low back pain. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015;(7):CD010265.. For this reason, more therapeutic exercise modalities should be tested for the treatment of pain associated with viruses, and a recommendation based on levels of evidence for their modality is not possible.

For the fatigue outcome, the high level of heterogeneity between studies made it impossible to carry out a meta-analysis. Fatigue, measured by time on the treadmill in minutes in HIV-infected people, was safely reduced after 12 weeks of aerobic training performed at 60-80% of maximum heart rate3434 Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701.. In a meta-analysis involving seven randomized controlled trials of subjects with chronic fatigue syndrome, compared to controls, the effect was relevant in aerobic exercise such as walking, swimming, cycling or dancing. The control groups of the aforementioned meta-analysis used, among others, were usual care, Cognitive-Behavioral Terapy (CBT) and pharmacological treatment; in which there was a significant reduction in fatigue after treatment with aerobic exercises4545 Larun L, Brurberg KG, Odgaard-Jensen J, Price JR. Exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;(4):CD003200.. In the present study, the outcomes were measured using different scales, and it was not possible to present conclusive data. However, this exercise modality seems to be promising in the treatment of chronic fatigue and, therefore, a greater number of clinical trials need to complement its evaluation.

Aerobic training combined with flexibility exercises was compared to home exercises guided by a booklet in the population with post-polio syndrome. It was found that both possibilities improved fatigue after a regular exercise program3535 Oncu J, Durmaz B, Karapolat H. Short-term effects of aerobic exercise on functional capacity, fatigue, and quality of life in patients with post-polio syndrome. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(2):155-63.. In the same population, aerobic training was used combined with muscle strengthening and functional exercises. Compared to usual care, exercises were not superior to the control group in reducing fatigue in severely fatigued patients3737 Koopman FS, Voorn EL, Beelen A, Bleijenberg G, de Visser M, Brehm MA, Nollet F. No reduction of severe fatigue in patients with postpolio syndrome by exercise therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy: results of an RCT. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2016;30(5):402-10..

Similar to the post-polio syndrome, in the HIV population, the comparison of aerobic exercise with muscle strengthening of the upper limbs did not show eficacy3636 Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81.. A study that evaluated aerobic training on fatigue in people with multiple sclerosis found a small positive effect after the intervention, not leading to clinically significant improvements4646 Heine M, Verschuren O, Hoogervorst EL, van Munster E, Hacking HG, Visser-Meily A, Twisk JW, Beckerman H, de Groot V, Kwakkel G. Does aerobic training alleviate fatigue and improve societal participation in patients with multiple sclerosis? A randomized controlled trial. Mult Scler. 2017;23(11):1517-26.. Another study showed that fatigue significantly decreased in subjects with cancer who performed exercise compared to the control group. The authors believe that the results may be due to the reduction of inflammation, gain in muscle mass or strength, improvement in functional capacity and mental health4747 Nakano J, Hashizume K, Fukushima T, Ueno K, Matsuura E, Ikio Y, Ishii S, Morishita S, Tanaka K, Kusuba Y. Efects of aerobic and resistance exercises on physical symptoms in cancer patients: a meta-analysis. Integr Cancer Ter. 2018;17(4):1048-58..

The present findings point to a greater effectiveness in the combination of aerobic and resistance exercises, mainly because patients after viral infection usually present both symptoms. It is worth mentioning that the neurofunctional diferences in each of the populations in which the protocols were tested may justify the divergences in the results, opening a question about the effectiveness of exercises in COVID-19 that should also be tested in specific clinical trials for this population.

COVID-19 is a viral infection that has left people with persistent symptoms, such as pain and fatigue, even after three months of remission1212 Carfì A, Bernabei R, Landi F, Gemelli Against COVID-19 Post-Acute Care Study Group. Persistent symptoms in patients after acute COVID-19. JAMA. 2020;324(6):603-5.,1313 Orrù G, Bertelloni D, Diolaiuti F, Mucci F, Di Giuseppe M, Biella M, Gemignani A, Ciacchini R, Conversano C. Long-COVID syndrome? A study on the persistence of neurological, psychological and physiological symptoms. Healthcare. 2021;9(5):575.; common symptoms in viral infections in the studies included in this systematic review. A task force has been published by the European leaders Respiratory Society (ERS) and the American Toracic Society (ATS), which reiterate the importance of physical activity in patients who have been hospitalized with COVID-19.

Low to moderate intensity exercises, essentially between the sixth and eighth weeks after discharge, with monitoring of peripheral oxygen saturation were recommended4848 Wilson KC. Consensus-based recommendations in respiratory medicine. Eur Respir J. 2020;56:2002889.. A post-COVID-19 rehabilitation program, based on the Expert Consensus, was tested in a preliminary study, resulting in reduced fatigue in these individuals. Aerobic exercises such as walking or treadmill were performed, followed by muscle strength training in upper and lower limbs and educational discussions. Fatigue was assessed by the Chronic Disease Terapy Fatigue Scale (FACIT) with statistically significant symptom reduction in participants3333 Daynes E, Gerlis C, Chaplin E, Gardiner N, Singh SJ. Early experiences of rehabilitation for individuals post-COVID to improve fatigue, breathlessness exercise capacity and cognition - a cohort study. Chron Respir Dis. 2021;18:14799731211015691.. As the literature for the post-viral infection population is scarce and very new for COVID-19, this study is relevant and may inspire studies in this population, provided that therapeutic exercise protocols are tested in randomized clinical trials.

The limitation of this study lies in the databases that do not cover many studies in Chinese, a population that must already have interesting studies on exercises to treat pain and fatigue even in COVID-19. As future perspectives, more randomized clinical trials should be performed in this population for a higher level of evidence of this clinical response of improvement in pain and fatigue after physical exercises.

CONCLUSION

It can be concluded that exercises for the treatment of fatigue show very low evidence, while resistance exercises showed moderate evidence for the pain outcome. Although the safety and eficacy of the protocols cannot be guaranteed due to the lack of data in the literature that guarantee a high level of evidence for their recommendation, resistance exercises should be tested in clinical trials involving this population. Exercises are low-risk, low-cost interventions that can be helpful in treating the large number of people who may be affected by these conditions.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The project has financial support from the Higher Education Personnel Improvement Coordination (CAPES), with a master’s scholarship at the BAHIANA - School of Medicine and Public Health.

  • Sponsoring sources: The project has financial support from Higher Education Personnel Improvement Coordination (CAPES), with a master’s scholarship at the BAHIANA - School of Medicine and Public Health.

REFERENCES

  • 1
    Silva LA, Soares JPA, Silva L F, Silva RR, Araújo MS, Silva MVG, Oliveira ES, Mesquita LMF, Alencar I F, Dutra VCA, Silveira MB, Norbiato VNP, Silveira MLFG, Souza MGG, Barbosa ISF, Mendonça CFS, Duque ES, Oliveira JVE, Silva SFM. Pandemias e suas repercussões sociais ao longo da história associado ao novo SARS-COV-2: um estudo de revisão. Res Soc Dev. 2021;10(3):e59110313783.
  • 2
    Zappa A, Amendola A, Romanò L, Zanetti A. Emerging and re-emerging viruses in the era of globalisation. Blood Transfus. 2009;7(3):167-71.
  • 3
    Grubaugh ND, Ladner JT, Lemey P, Pybus OG, Rambaut A, Holmes EC, Andersen KG. Tracking virus outbreaks in the twenty-first century. Nat Microbiol. 2019;4(1):10-9.
  • 5
    Roychoudhury S, Das A, Sengupta P, Dutta S, Roychoudhury S, Choudhury A P, Ahmed ABF, Bhattacharjee S, Slama P. Viral pandemics of the last four decades: pathophysiology, health impacts and perspectives. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020;17(24):9411.
  • 6
    Estatísticas [Internet]. UNAIDS Brasil. 2022 [cited 2022 Sep 13]. Available from: https://unaids.org.br/estatisticas/
    » https://unaids.org.br/estatisticas/
  • 7
    COVID-19 Data Explorer [Internet]. Our World in Data. [cited 2022 Sep 13]. Available from: https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer
    » https://ourworldindata.org/explorers/coronavirus-data-explorer
  • 8
    Azagew AW, Woreta HK, Tilahun AD, Anlay DZ. High prevalence of pain among adult HIV-infected patients at University of Gondar Hospital, Northwest Ethiopia. J Pain Res. 2017;10:2461-9.
  • 10
    Mendes SMD, Baptista AF, Sá KN, Andrade DCA, Otero GG, Cavalcanti JZ, Isensee M F, Souza I, Kruschwsky RA, Galvão-castro B. Pain is highly prevalent in individuals with tropical spastic paraparesis. Health Care. 2013;1(3):47-53.
  • 11
    Oliveira ASB, Maynard FM. Síndrome pós-poliomielite. Rev Neurocienc. 2002;10(1):31-4.
  • 12
    Carfì A, Bernabei R, Landi F, Gemelli Against COVID-19 Post-Acute Care Study Group. Persistent symptoms in patients after acute COVID-19. JAMA. 2020;324(6):603-5.
  • 13
    Orrù G, Bertelloni D, Diolaiuti F, Mucci F, Di Giuseppe M, Biella M, Gemignani A, Ciacchini R, Conversano C. Long-COVID syndrome? A study on the persistence of neurological, psychological and physiological symptoms. Healthcare. 2021;9(5):575.
  • 14
    Raveendran AV, Jayadevan R, Sashidharan S. Long COVID: An overview. Diabetes Metab Syndr. 2021;15(3):869-75.
  • 15
    Soumahoro MK, Gérardin P, Boëlle PY, Perrau J, Fianu A, Pouchot J, Malvy D, Flahault A, Favier F, Hanslik T. Impact of Chikungunya virus infection on health status and quality of life: a retrospective cohort study. PLoS One. 2009;4(11):e7800.
  • 16
    Marimoutou C, Ferraro J, Javelle E, Deparis X, Simon F. Chikungunya infection: self-reported rheumatic morbidity and impaired quality of life persist 6 years later. Clin Microbiol Infect. 2015;21(7):688-93.
  • 17
    Garip Y, Eser F, Bodur H, Baskan B, Sivas F, Yilmaz O. Health related quality of life in Turkish polio survivors: impact of post-polio on the health related quality of life in terms of functional status, severity of pain, fatigue, and social, and emotional functioning. Rev Bras Reumatol Engl Ed. 2017;57(1):1-7.
  • 18
    Fontes LCDSF, Costa PJR, Fernandes JCJ, Vieira TS, Reis NC, Coimbra IMM, Paiva JAOC. The impact of severe COVID-19 on health-related quality of life and disability: an early follow-up perspective. Rev Bras The r Intensiva. 2022;34(1):141-6.
  • 19
    Stonerock GL, Hoffman BM, Smith PJ, Blumenthal JA. Exercise as treatment for anxiety: systematic review and analysis. Ann Behav Med. 2015;49(4):542-56.
  • 20
    Geneen LJ, Moore RA, Clarke C, Martin D, Colvin LA, Smith BH. Physical activity and exercise for chronic pain in adults: an overview of Cochrane Reviews. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;4(4):CD011279.
  • 21
    Bricca A, Harris LK, Jäger M, Smith SM, Juhl CB, Skou ST. Benefts and harms of exercise therapy in people with multimorbidity: A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Ageing Res Rev. 2020;63:101166.
  • 22
    Palermo PCG, Feijó OG. Exercício físico e infecção pelo HIV: atualização e recomendações. Rev Bras Fisiol Exe. 2003;2:218-46.
  • 23
    Wittmer VL, Paro FM, Duarte H, Capellini VK, Barbalho-Moulim MC. Early mobilization and physical exercise in patients with COVID-19: A narrative literature review. Complement Ter Clin Pract. 2021;43:101364.
  • 24
    Macêdo MC, Mota RS, Patrício NA, Baptista A F, Andrade Filho AS, Sá KN. Pain and quality of life in human t-cell lymphotropic virus type 1-associated myelopathy or tropical spastic paraparesis after home-based exercise protocol: a randomized clinical trial. Rev Soc Bras Med Trop. 2019;52:e20180270.
  • 25
    Patrício NA, Vidal DG, Pinto EB, Sá KN, Baptista A F. Efectiveness of virtual reality games for falls, postural oscillations, pain and quality of life of individual HAM/TSP: a randomized, controlled, clinical trial. J Neurovirol. 2020;26(5):676-86.
  • 26
    Hozo S P, Djulbegovic B, Hozo I. Estimating the mean and variance from the median, range, and the size of a sample. BMC Med Res Methodol. 2005;20;5:13.
  • 27
    Maharaj SS, Yakasai AM. Does a rehabilitation program of aerobic and progressive resisted exercises influence HIV-induced distal neuropathic pain? Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2018;97(5):364-9.
  • 28
    Hand GA, Phillips KD, Dudgeon WD, William Lyerly G, Larry Durstine J, Burgess SE. Moderate intensity exercise training reverses functional aerobic impairment in HIV-infected individuals. AIDS Care. 2008;20(9):1066-74.
  • 29
    Facchinetti LD, Araújo AQ, Silva MT, Leite ACC, Azevedo M F, Chequer GL, Oliveira RV, Ferreira AS, Lima MA. Home-based exercise program in TSP/HAM individuals: a feasibility and effectiveness study. Arq Neuro-Psiquiatr. 2017;75(4):221-7.
  • 30
    Nosrat S, Whitworth JW, Dunsiger SI, SantaBarbara NJ, Ciccolo J T. Acute effects of resistance exercise in a depressed HIV sample: The exercise for people who are immunocompromised (EPIC) study. Ment Health Phys Act. 2017;12:2-9.
  • 31
    Voorn EL, Koopman FS, Brehm MA, Beelen A, de Haan A, Gerrits KHL, Nollet F. Aerobic exercise training in post-polio syndrome: process evaluation of a randomized controlled trial. PLoS One. 2016;11(7):e0159280.
  • 32
    Lee KA, Jong S, Gay CL. Fatigue management for adults living with HIV: a randomized controlled pilot study. Res Nurs Health. 2020;43(1):56-67.
  • 33
    Daynes E, Gerlis C, Chaplin E, Gardiner N, Singh SJ. Early experiences of rehabilitation for individuals post-COVID to improve fatigue, breathlessness exercise capacity and cognition - a cohort study. Chron Respir Dis. 2021;18:14799731211015691.
  • 34
    Smith BA, Neidig JL, Nickel JT, Mitchell GL, Para M F, Fass RJ. Aerobic exercise: effects on parameters related to fatigue, dyspnea, weight and body composition in HIV-infected adults. AIDS. 2001;15(6):693-701.
  • 35
    Oncu J, Durmaz B, Karapolat H. Short-term effects of aerobic exercise on functional capacity, fatigue, and quality of life in patients with post-polio syndrome. Clin Rehabil. 2009;23(2):155-63.
  • 36
    Jaggers JR, Hand GA, Dudgeon WD, Burgess S, Phillips KD, Durstine JL, Blair SN. Aerobic and resistance training improves mood state among adults living with HIV. Int J Sports Med. 2015;36(2):175-81.
  • 37
    Koopman FS, Voorn EL, Beelen A, Bleijenberg G, de Visser M, Brehm MA, Nollet F. No reduction of severe fatigue in patients with postpolio syndrome by exercise therapy or cognitive behavioral therapy: results of an RCT. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2016;30(5):402-10.
  • 38
    Borges J, Baptista A F, Santana N, Souza I, Kruschewsky RA, Galvão-Castro B, Sá KN. Pilates exercises improve low back pain and quality of life in patients with HTLV-1 virus: a randomized crossover clinical trial. J Bodyw Mov Ter. 2014;18(1):68-74.
  • 39
    Parker R, Jelsma J, Stein DJ. Managing Pain in Women living with HIV/AIDS: a randomized controlled trial testing the effect of a six-week peer-led exercise and education intervention. J Nerv Ment Dis. 2016;204(9):665-72.
  • 40
    de Oliveira BFA, Carvalho PRC, de Souza Holanda AS, Dos Santos RISB, da Silva FAX, Barros GWP, de Albuquerque EC, Dantas AT, Cavalcanti NG, Ranzolin A, Duarte ALBP, Marques CDL. Pilates method in the treatment of patients with Chikungunya fever: a randomized controlled trial. Clin Rehabil. 2019;33(10):1614-24.
  • 41
    Neumann IL, de Oliveira DA, de Barros EL, da S Santos G, de Oliveira LS, Duarte AL, Marques CD, Dantas AT, Dantas D, de Siqueira GR, da Silva Tenório A. Resistance exercises improve physical function in chronic Chikungunya fever patients: a randomized controlled trial. Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2021;57(4):620-9.
  • 42
    Searle A, Spink M, Ho A, Chuter V. Exercise interventions for the treatment of chronic low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Clin Rehabil. 201529(12):1155-67.
  • 43
    Miyamoto GC, Costa LOP, Cabral CMN. Eficacy of the Pilates method for pain and disability in patients with chronic nonspecific low back pain: a systematic review with meta-analysis. Braz J Phys Ter. 2013;17(6):517-32.
  • 44
    T P, Maher CG, Saragiotto BT, Hancock MJ, Ostelo RW, Cabral CM, Menezes Costa LC, Costa LO. Pilates for low back pain. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015;(7):CD010265.
  • 45
    Larun L, Brurberg KG, Odgaard-Jensen J, Price JR. Exercise therapy for chronic fatigue syndrome. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2017;(4):CD003200.
  • 46
    Heine M, Verschuren O, Hoogervorst EL, van Munster E, Hacking HG, Visser-Meily A, Twisk JW, Beckerman H, de Groot V, Kwakkel G. Does aerobic training alleviate fatigue and improve societal participation in patients with multiple sclerosis? A randomized controlled trial. Mult Scler. 2017;23(11):1517-26.
  • 47
    Nakano J, Hashizume K, Fukushima T, Ueno K, Matsuura E, Ikio Y, Ishii S, Morishita S, Tanaka K, Kusuba Y. Efects of aerobic and resistance exercises on physical symptoms in cancer patients: a meta-analysis. Integr Cancer Ter. 2018;17(4):1048-58.
  • 48
    Wilson KC. Consensus-based recommendations in respiratory medicine. Eur Respir J. 2020;56:2002889.

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    21 Nov 2022
  • Date of issue
    Jul-Sep 2022

History

  • Received
    08 July 2022
  • Accepted
    23 Sept 2022
Sociedade Brasileira para o Estudo da Dor Av. Conselheiro Rodrigues Alves, 937 Cj2 - Vila Mariana, CEP: 04014-012, São Paulo, SP - Brasil, Telefones: , (55) 11 5904-2881/3959 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: dor@dor.org.br