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Telerehabilitation in Patients With Elevated Pulmonary Artery Pressure

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Summary

NIH registered clinical trial NCT07535398 on ClinicalTrials.gov studying whether synchronous telerehabilitation improves exercise capacity, dyspnea, fatigue, functional status, and quality of life in patients with elevated pulmonary artery pressure (systolic PAP ≥50 mmHg). The randomized controlled trial will compare an 8-week telerehabilitation program (3 sessions/week, 30 min/session) against breathing and posture exercises. Estimated completion date is April 17, 2026.

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What changed

NIH registered a new clinical trial on ClinicalTrials.gov evaluating synchronous telerehabilitation versus breathing and posture exercises in patients with elevated pulmonary artery pressure (systolic PAP ≥50 mmHg). The trial will assess impacts on exercise capacity, dyspnea, fatigue, functional status, and quality of life over an 8-week intervention period.

For patients meeting enrollment criteria with elevated pulmonary artery pressure, this trial offers potential access to telerehabilitation interventions. Healthcare providers and clinical investigators should note the study details for potential referral or enrollment considerations. The trial registration provides transparency on ongoing research in this patient population.

Archived snapshot

Apr 17, 2026

GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.

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Telerehabilitation in Patients With Elevated Pulmonary Artery Pressure

N/A NCT07535398 Kind: NA Apr 17, 2026

Abstract

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if synchronous telerehabilitation is effective in patients with elevated pulmonary artery pressure identified by echocardiography (systolic pulmonary artery pressure ≥50 mmHg). It will also evaluate the effects of telerehabilitation on exercise capacity, dyspnea, fatigue, functional status, and quality of life. The main questions it aims to answer are:

Does synchronous telerehabilitation improve exercise and functional capacity in these patients? Does synchronous telerehabilitation improve dyspnea, fatigue, psychological status, and quality of life?

Researchers will compare synchronous telerehabilitation with breathing and posture exercises to see if telerehabilitation provides greater clinical and functional benefit.

Participants will:

Be randomly assigned to one of 2 groups Follow an 8-week program, 3 times per week, for 30 minutes per session Perform aerobic, endurance, and strengthening exercises by synchronous telerehabilitation, or breathing and posture exercises in the control group Complete assessments before and after treatment

Conditions: Elevated Pulmonary Artery Pressure

Interventions: Synchronous Telerehabilitation, Breathing and Posture Exercises

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Last updated

Classification

Agency
NIH
Instrument
Notice
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
NCT07535398

Who this affects

Applies to
Healthcare providers Clinical investigators Patients
Industry sector
6211 Healthcare Providers
Activity scope
Clinical trial registration Telehealth service delivery Pulmonary rehabilitation
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Healthcare
Operational domain
Clinical Operations
Topics
Public Health Medical Devices

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