managing-cardiac-rehabilitation

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Structures cardiac rehab prescriptions with exercise parameters and risk stratification. Use when prescribing cardiac rehab, setting exercise targets, or monitoring rehab progress.

lev-os By lev-os schedule Updated 3/22/2026

name: managing-cardiac-rehabilitation description: Structures cardiac rehab prescriptions with exercise parameters and risk stratification. Use when prescribing cardiac rehab, setting exercise targets, or monitoring rehab progress. tags:

  • management
  • cardiology
  • risk metadata: author: casemark practice_areas:
    • Cardiology
    • Interventional Cardiology
    • Electrophysiology document_types:
    • Management Report skill_modes:
    • Management
    • Coordination

Managing Cardiac Rehabilitation

Structures cardiac rehab prescriptions with exercise parameters and risk stratification.

Why This Skill Exists

Cardiac rehabilitation reduces cardiovascular mortality by 20–30% and all-cause mortality by 13–24%, yet fewer than 25% of eligible patients are referred or enrolled. CMS expanded coverage in 2024 to include heart failure (HFrEF) as a qualifying diagnosis, and the AHA/AACVPR recognize cardiac rehab as a Class I recommendation for post-MI, post-CABG, post-PCI, stable angina, heart failure, and post-valve surgery patients.

The exercise prescription in cardiac rehabilitation must be individualized based on risk stratification, functional capacity, comorbidities, and hemodynamic response to exercise. A poorly calibrated prescription risks either undertreating a patient capable of higher workloads or triggering ischemia/arrhythmia in a high-risk patient.


Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)

  1. What is the qualifying diagnosis — post-MI, post-CABG, post-PCI, stable angina, HFrEF, post-valve surgery/intervention? (default: "Qualifying diagnosis not specified")
  2. When was the index event or surgery? (default: "Date not provided")
  3. What is the most recent LVEF? (default: "LVEF not documented")
  4. Was a baseline exercise stress test performed with METs achieved? (default: "No baseline stress test available")
  5. What is the patient's resting HR, BP, and current medications (especially beta-blockers)? (default: "Vitals and medications not provided")
  6. Are there any exercise contraindications — unstable angina, decompensated HF, uncontrolled arrhythmia, severe AS, acute PE? (default: "No known contraindications")
  7. What is the patient's current functional status — independent ADLs, ambulatory, or limited? (default: "Functional status not assessed")
  8. Are there musculoskeletal or neurologic limitations affecting exercise? (default: "No known limitations")

Documents to Request

  • Discharge summary from index event
  • Exercise stress test results (METs, HR response, ECG findings)
  • Echocardiogram report (LVEF, valve function)
  • Current medication list with dosages
  • BNP/NT-proBNP if heart failure
  • Surgical/procedural report (CABG, PCI, valve)
  • Device interrogation if ICD/CRT present
  • Physical therapy or occupational therapy assessments if available
  • Patient's goals and preferences documentation

Step 1: Risk Stratification for Exercise

AHA/AACVPR Risk Stratification:

Risk Level Criteria Monitoring Level
Low Uncomplicated MI/PCI, LVEF ≥ 50%, no ischemia on stress test, no complex arrhythmia, functional capacity ≥ 7 METs ECG monitoring initial sessions → discontinue when stable
Moderate LVEF 40–49%, or mild residual ischemia, or functional capacity 5–6.9 METs, or inability to self-monitor Continuous ECG monitoring × 6–12 sessions
High LVEF < 40%, complex ventricular arrhythmia, exercise-induced ischemia at low workload (< 5 METs), hemodynamic instability Continuous ECG monitoring throughout program, physician-supervised sessions

Absolute Contraindications to Exercise:

  • Unstable angina (not yet stabilized)
  • Decompensated heart failure
  • Uncontrolled arrhythmia causing symptoms or hemodynamic compromise
  • Severe symptomatic aortic stenosis
  • Acute PE or pulmonary infarction
  • Acute myocarditis or pericarditis
  • Acute aortic dissection

Step 2: Exercise Prescription (FITT Principle)

Frequency: 3–5 sessions per week (minimum 36 sessions over 12–18 weeks per CMS coverage)

Intensity Prescription Methods:

Method Calculation Best For
HR reserve (Karvonen) THR = [(HRmax − HRrest) × %intensity] + HRrest Most accurate; requires max HR from stress test
% of HRmax THR = HRmax × %intensity When stress test available
RPE (Borg 6–20 scale) Target: 11–14 ("fairly light" to "somewhat hard") When HR unreliable (AFib, paced rhythm, beta-blocker)
METs method Target: 40–80% of peak METs from stress test When precise MET data available
Talk test Able to speak in sentences but not sing Supplementary; useful for patient self-monitoring

Starting Intensity (by risk level):

  • Low risk: 60–80% HR reserve or 12–14 RPE
  • Moderate risk: 50–70% HR reserve or 11–13 RPE
  • High risk: 40–60% HR reserve or 10–12 RPE; supervised

Time: 20–60 minutes of aerobic exercise per session (start at 15–20 for deconditioned patients, progress by 5 min/week)

Type:

  • Aerobic: treadmill walking, stationary cycling, arm ergometry, recumbent stepping
  • Resistance training: begin 2–3 weeks post-event for low/moderate risk; 5–6 weeks for high risk or post-sternotomy; 1–3 sets of 10–15 reps at 30–50% of 1-RM
  • Flexibility: gentle stretching, 5–10 minutes, every session

Step 3: Monitoring and Progression

Session Monitoring Checklist:

  • Pre-exercise: BP, HR, rhythm (ECG if monitored), symptoms, weight
  • During exercise: HR, RPE, rhythm, symptoms every 5–10 minutes
  • Post-exercise: BP, HR recovery, symptoms, 6-minute walk distance (periodic)
  • Abnormal responses requiring exercise modification or termination: SBP drop > 20 mmHg, chest pain, ST changes, new arrhythmia, HR > prescribed zone, SpO₂ < 88%

Progression Protocol:

  • Advance by one variable at a time (increase duration before intensity)
  • Increase duration by 5 minutes when tolerated × 2 consecutive sessions
  • Increase intensity by 5% HR reserve when current level tolerated for full sessions × 1 week
  • Transition from continuous to interval training when functional capacity improves to > 5 METs
  • Goal: 150 minutes/week moderate-intensity or 75 minutes/week vigorous by program completion

Step 4: Comprehensive Risk Factor Management

Core Components Beyond Exercise:

Component Target/Action
Blood pressure < 130/80 mmHg; medication optimization
Lipids LDL < 70 mg/dL (< 55 if very high risk); high-intensity statin
Diabetes HbA1c < 7% (individualized); SGLT2i if HF
Smoking Absolute cessation; pharmacotherapy (varenicline, NRT, bupropion)
Weight BMI < 30 kg/m²; waist circumference targets
Psychosocial Screen for depression (PHQ-9), anxiety; refer for counseling
Nutrition Mediterranean or DASH diet; sodium < 2 g/day for HF; referral to dietitian

Outcome Metrics to Track:

  • Functional capacity (METs improvement from baseline)
  • 6-minute walk distance (improvement ≥ 30 m is clinically meaningful)
  • LVEF reassessment at program completion (HF patients)
  • Medication adherence rates
  • Risk factor targets achieved (% at goal)
  • Patient-reported outcomes (quality of life, depression scores)

Step 5: Program Completion and Transition

Phase Progression:

  • Phase I: Inpatient (mobilization post-event, education, discharge planning)
  • Phase II: Supervised outpatient (36 sessions per CMS; up to 72 with intensive cardiac rehab)
  • Phase III: Maintenance (community-based, self-monitored, lifelong)

Transition Plan for Phase III:

  1. Document final exercise capacity (repeat stress test if indicated)
  2. Provide written home exercise prescription with HR zones, RPE targets, and warning symptoms
  3. Ensure all risk factor targets are addressed with ongoing medical management
  4. Coordinate with PCP and cardiologist for long-term follow-up
  5. Recommend community exercise program or gym-based maintenance
  6. Establish patient self-monitoring protocol (HR, BP, symptoms, weight)

Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)

  1. Is the risk stratification documented with justification for monitoring level?
  2. Is the exercise prescription specific — frequency, intensity (HR or RPE), time, and type?
  3. Are progression criteria defined?
  4. Are all core components (nutrition, psychosocial, smoking, lipids) addressed?
  5. Is the transition plan to maintenance documented?

Quality Audit

  • Qualifying diagnosis and eligibility confirmed
  • Risk stratification level assigned (low/moderate/high)
  • Baseline functional capacity documented (METs or 6MWD)
  • Exercise prescription follows FITT format with specific parameters
  • Intensity calculated using HR reserve, %MPHR, or RPE with method documented
  • Monitoring level matches risk stratification
  • Contraindications screened and documented
  • Resistance training initiation timing appropriate for diagnosis
  • Progression criteria defined (duration before intensity)
  • Risk factor targets documented for each core component
  • Depression screening performed (PHQ-9 or equivalent)
  • Smoking cessation addressed with pharmacotherapy if applicable
  • Phase III transition plan with home exercise prescription
  • Session attendance tracked against CMS 36-session benchmark

Guidelines

  1. Every ACS, CABG, PCI, valve surgery, and HFrEF patient should receive an automatic cardiac rehab referral at discharge — referral gaps are the primary barrier to enrollment.
  2. Exercise prescriptions must be individualized — a generic "walk 30 minutes" instruction is insufficient. Specify HR zone, RPE target, and progression plan.
  3. Patients on beta-blockers have blunted HR response — use RPE as the primary intensity guide rather than relying solely on HR targets.
  4. In HFrEF patients, monitor weight daily and hold exercise if weight gain > 2 kg in 48 hours (fluid overload) until diuretic adjustment.
  5. Resistance training post-sternotomy requires 6–8 weeks of healing before upper-body exercises — start with lower-extremity resistance and progress.
  6. Depression and anxiety screening at intake and periodically during the program is mandatory — untreated depression doubles cardiac event recurrence risk.
  7. Document exercise-related adverse events (arrhythmia, angina, hypotension) and the clinical response — this data informs ongoing risk stratification.
  8. CMS covers 36 sessions over 36 weeks; intensive cardiac rehab covers up to 72 sessions — document medical necessity if extended program is needed.
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