The sixth and final issue of 2022 (Volume 42, No. 6) will be available in early November for AACVPR members. This issue includes a special focused section on prevention, including four invited review articles on important prevention topics. For an overview of the content in this issue, please view the brief video below:
You can access the Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention:
Special Focused Section: Invited Reviews on Important Topics in Prevention
- Primordial Prevention of Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Review of the Literature
- Assessment of ASCVD Risk in Primary Prevention
- Screening for Psychological Distress and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease and Related Mortality: A Systematized Review, Meta-analysis, and Case for Prevention
- Built Environments and Cardiovascular Health: Review and Implications
Scientific Review
- Exercise Training Programs Improve Cardiorespiratory and Functional Fitness in Adults with Asthma: a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
- Meta-Analysis of Antidepressant Pharmacotherapy in Patients Eligible for Cardiac Rehabilitation: Antidepressant Ambivalence
Cardiac Rehabilitation
- Depressive Symptoms after Acute Myocardial Infarction and its Association with Low Functional Capacity and Physical Activity
- Benefits of the First Pritikin Outpatient Intensive Cardiac Rehabilitation (ICR) Program
- Evaluating the Feasibility of a Statewide Collaboration to Improve Cardiac Rehabilitation Participation: The Michigan Cardiac Rehab Network
Peripheral Artery Disease
- Association Between Meeting Physical Activity Time-Intensity Guidelines with Ambulation, Quality of Life, and Inflammation in Claudication
Prevention
Cardiorespiratory Optimal Point Is a Submaximal Exercise Test Variable and a Predictor of Mortality Risk: The Ball State Adult Fitness Longitudinal Lifestyle Study (BALL ST)
Research Letters
- Exercise Based Cardiac Rehabilitation: Is a Little Encouragement Enough?
- Know Your Numbers: Patient and Physician Disparity in Cardiovascular Risk Perception After an Acute Coronary Syndrome
- Completion Rate of Hybrid Videoconferencing Pulmonary Telerehabilitation During COVID-19
- Alveolar Volume Impairment Affects the Prognostic Value of Peak Exercise Oxygen Uptake in Heart Failure with Reduced Ejection Fraction
- Substituting Stationary Time With Moderate-Intensity Activity May Improve Flow-Mediated Dilation
November/December Literature Update
Upcoming Content
For upcoming content in the Journal of Cardiopulmonary Rehabilitation and Prevention:
Check out the Published Ahead of Print section for articles published ahead of the print version of JCRP.