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      Cardiac Rehabilitation
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What To Expect When Starting Cardiac Rehabilitation

Your doctor may refer you to cardiac rehab during an office visit or while you’re in the hospital recovering from a heart attack or heart surgery. If your doctor doesn’t mention it, ask him or her if cardiac rehab might benefit you.

Rehab activities vary depending on your condition. If you’re recovering from major heart surgery, rehab will start with a member of the team helping you to sit up in a chair or take a few steps. You will work on range-of-motion exercises. These include moving your fingers, hands, arms, legs, and feet. Over time you will increase your activity level.

Once you leave the hospital, rehab will continue in a rehab center. The rehab center may be part of the hospital or in another place. Try to find a center close to home that offers services at a convenient time. If no centers are near your home, or if it’s too hard to get to them, ask your doctor about home-based rehab.

You will need to go to rehab regularly to learn how to reduce risk factors and to begin an exercise program.

Health Assessment

Before you start your cardiac rehab program, your rehab team will assess your health. This includes taking your medical history, doing a physical exam, and performing tests.

Medical History

A doctor or nurse will ask you about previous heart problems, heart surgery, and any heart-related symptoms you have. He or she also will ask whether you’ve had medical procedures or other health problems (such as diabetes or kidney disease).

The doctor or nurse will want to know:

  • Whether your family has a history of heart disease.
  • What medicines you’re taking, including over-the-counter and herbal medicines. Describe how much, how often, and when you take each medicine.
  • Whether you smoke and how much.
  • How you check your blood sugar level, and how often you do it (if you have diabetes).
  • Whether you’ve ever had hypoglycemia (HI-po-gli-SE-me-ah). This condition can occur in people who take medicines to control their blood sugar level.

Your rehab team will ask questions to help them assess your quality of life and well-being.

Physical Exam

A doctor or nurse will do a physical exam to check your overall health, including your heart rate, blood pressure, reflexes, and breathing.

Tests

Your doctor may order tests to check your heart.

A resting EKG (electrocardiogram) is a simple test that detects and records the electrical activity of your heart. It shows how fast your heart is beating. It also shows the heart's rhythm (steady or irregular) and the strength and timing of electrical signals as they pass through each part of your heart.

You also may need tests to measure your cholesterol and blood sugar levels. If you have diabetes, staff also will do an HbA1C test to check your blood sugar control. This test shows how well your diabetes has been managed over time.


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