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Dive into the research topics where I. Vogiatzis is active.

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Featured researches published by I. Vogiatzis.


European Respiratory Journal | 2002

Interval training as an alternative modality to continuous exercise in patients with COPD

I. Vogiatzis; Serafim Nanas; C Roussos

Understanding of what constitutes a training load adequate to induce training effects in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is still evolving. The present study investigated whether interval training (IT) is effective in terms of inducing measurable improvements in physiological response and compared its effects on exercise tolerance (ET) and quality of life to those of continuous training (CT). Thirty-six COPD patients, with a forced expiratory volume in one second of 45±4% of the predicted value (mean±sem), were randomly assigned to CT (exercise at 50% of baseline peak work-rate) or IT (work for 30 s at 100% of peak work-rate alternating with 30‐s rest intervals) groups that cycled 40 min·day−1 and 2 days·week−1 for 12 weeks. After training, both groups showed significantly improved ET (IT, 57±6 to 71±8 W; CT, 57±5 to 70±6 W) and total quality-of-life score of the Chronic Respiratory Disease Questionnaire (IT, 77±3 to 88±2; CT, 78±3 to 93±2). At identical levels of exercise, minute ventilation was significantly reduced (IT, 35.8±2.5 to 31.7±2.5 L·min−1; CT, 36.4±2.7 to 32.5±2.7 L·min−1). The magnitude of improvement in these variables was not significantly different among groups. The present data expand on the principles of exercise prescription for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients by demonstrating that interval training elicits substantial training effects, which are similar in magnitude to those produced by continuous training at half the exercise intensity but double the exercise time.


European Respiratory Journal | 2004

Dynamic hyperinflation and tolerance to interval exercise in patients with advanced COPD

I. Vogiatzis; Serafim Nanas; E. Kastanakis; O. Georgiadou; O. Papazahou; Ch. Roussos

Dynamic hyperinflation (DH) contributes importantly to the limitation of constant-load exercise (CLE) in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, its role in the limitation of interval exercise (IE) remains to be explored. The change (Δ) in inspiratory capacity (IC) was measured to reflect changes in DH in 27 COPD patients (forced expiratory volume in one second mean±sem % predicted: 40±3) at the end of a symptom-limited CLE test at 80% of peak work capacity (WRmax) and an IE test at 100% WRmax (30 s of work, alternated with 30 s of unloaded pedalling). At the limit of tolerance in both IE and CLE, patients exhibited similar DH (ΔIC: 0.39±0.05 L and 0.45±0.05 L, respectively). However, exercise endurance time (tend) for IE (32.7±3.0 min) was significantly greater than for CLE (10.3±1.6 min). The IE tend correlated with resting IC, expressed as % pred normal. At 30 and 90% of total IE tend, ΔIC (0.43±0.06 and 0.39±0.05 L, respectively) and minute ventilation (31.1±1.6 and 32.7±2.2 L·min−1, respectively) were not significantly different. Resting hyperinflation helps to explain the limitation of interval exercise. Implementation of interval exercise for rehabilitation should provide important clinical benefits because it prolongs exercise endurance time and allows sustaining higher stable ventilation.


Clinical & Experimental Allergy | 2001

Exhaled nitric oxide in seasonal allergic rhinitis: influence of pollen season and therapy.

Ch. Gratziou; N. Rovina; M. Lignos; I. Vogiatzis; Ch. Roussos

Exhaled nitric oxide (eNO) has been proposed as a potential indirect marker of lower airway inflammation in asthma. To investigate the existence of lower airways inflammation in allergic rhinitis eNO measurements were performed in 32 patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic seasonal allergic rhinitis early in and out of pollen seasons and in 80 healthy volunteers. To further define how exhaled NO is modified by therapy, NO levels were detected following 1‐month treatment with either inhaled steroids or non‐steroids therapy with nedocromil. Exhaled NO (mean ± SE) was significantly elevated in patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis with and without symptoms (24.2 + 2.5 and 13.9 + 2.9 ppb, respectively) as compared to healthy volunteers (4.5 + 0.3 ppb) both in and out of pollen season (21.2 + 2.1 and 9.0 + 1.4 p.p.b., respectively) with a higher increase during the allergen exposure in season. Higher levels of exhaled NO were detected in patients with symptoms, either from the upper or lower airways, and with bronchial hyperreactivity. The increased exhaled NO in symptomatic patients was reduced only by inhaled steroids and not by nedocromil. These findings possibly suggest the existence of lower airway inflammation in both symptomatic and asymptomatic patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis in and out of pollen season. Thus, exhaled NO may be used as a non‐invasive index for early detection of lower airway inflammation and for monitoring the optional treatment in patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis.


Thorax | 2017

Physical activity is increased by a 12-week semiautomated telecoaching programme in patients with COPD: a multicentre randomised controlled trial

Heleen Demeyer; Zafeiris Louvaris; Anja Frei; Roberto Rabinovich; C de Jong; Elena Gimeno-Santos; Matthias Loeckx; Sara Buttery; Noah Rubio; T. van der Molen; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; I. Vogiatzis; Milo A. Puhan; Judith Garcia-Aymerich; Michael I. Polkey; Thierry Troosters

Rationale Reduced physical activity (PA) in patients with COPD is associated with a poor prognosis. Increasing PA is a key therapeutic target, but thus far few strategies have been found effective in this patient group. Objectives To investigate the effectiveness of a 12-week semiautomated telecoaching intervention on PA in patients with COPD in a multicentre European randomised controlled trial. Methods 343 patients from six centres, encompassing a wide spectrum of disease severity, were randomly allocated to either a usual care group (UCG) or a telecoaching intervention group (IG) between June and December 2014. This 12-week intervention included an exercise booklet and a step counter providing feedback both directly and via a dedicated smartphone application. The latter provided an individualised daily activity goal (steps) revised weekly and text messages as well as allowing occasional telephone contacts with investigators. PA was measured using accelerometry during 1 week preceding randomisation and during week 12. Secondary outcomes included exercise capacity and health status. Analyses were based on modified intention to treat. Main results Both groups were comparable at baseline in terms of factors influencing PA. At 12 weeks, the intervention yielded a between-group difference of mean, 95% CI (lower limit – upper limit; ll-ul) +1469, 95% CI (971 to 1965) steps/day and +10.4, 95% CI (6.1 to 14.7) min/day moderate PA; favouring the IG (all p≤0.001). The change in 6-min walk distance was significantly different (13.4, 95% CI (3.40 to 23.5) m, p<0.01), favouring the IG. In IG patients, an improvement could be observed in the functional state domain of the clinical COPD questionnaire (p=0.03) compared with UCG. Other health status outcomes did not differ. Conclusions The amount and intensity of PA can be significantly increased in patients with COPD using a 12-week semiautomated telecoaching intervention including a step counter and an application installed on a smartphone. Trial registration number: NCT02158065.


European Respiratory Journal | 2011

Strategies of muscle training in very severe COPD patients

I. Vogiatzis

There is strong evidence that exercise training, constituting the cornerstone of pulmonary rehabilitation, improves exercise tolerance, dyspnoea sensations, functional capacity and quality of life in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. However, intolerable sensations of breathlessness and/or peripheral muscle discomfort may prevent such patients from tolerating high-intensity exercise levels for sufficiently long periods of time to obtain true physiological training effects. Accordingly, the major issue that arises is the selection of the appropriate training strategy, which is tailored to the cardiovascular, pulmonary and peripheral muscle limitations of the individual patient and is aimed at maximising the effect of exercise conditioning. Within this context, the present article explores the application of strategies that optimise exercise tolerance by reducing dyspnoea sensations, namely noninvasive mechanical ventilation, oxygen and/or heliox supplementation. Administration of heliox or oxygen during exercise also increases peripheral muscle oxygen delivery, thereby delaying the onset of peripheral muscle fatigue. Particular emphasis is also given to interval exercise and resistance-muscle training as both modalities allow the application of intense loads on peripheral muscles with tolerable levels of dyspnoea sensations. In patients with profound muscle weakness and intense breathlessness upon physical exertion, execution of short bouts of interval or local muscle strength conditioning, along with oxygen breathing, may constitute a feasible and effective approach to pulmonary rehabilitation.


European Respiratory Journal | 2008

Chest wall volume regulation during exercise in COPD patients with GOLD stages II to IV

I. Vogiatzis; Grigoris Stratakos; Dimitris Athanasopoulos; Olga Georgiadou; Spyretta Golemati; Antonia Koutsoukou; I. Weisman; C Roussos; Spyros Zakynthinos

The present study investigated how end-expiratory ribcage and abdominal volume regulation during exercise is related to the degree of dynamic chest wall hyperinflation in patients with different spirometric severity of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) based on the Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease (GOLD) classification. In total, 42 COPD patients and 11 age-matched healthy subjects were studied during a ramp-incremental cycling test to the limit of tolerance (Wpeak). Volume variations of the chest wall (at end expiration (EEVcw) and end inspiration) and its compartments (ribcage (Vrc) and abdominal (Vab)) were computed by optoelectronic plethysmography. At Wpeak, only patients in GOLD stages III and IV exhibited a significant increase in EEVcw (increase of 454±509 and 562±363 mL, respectively). These patients did not significantly reduce end-expiratory Vab, whereas patients in GOLD stage II resembled healthy subjects with significantly reduced end-expiratory Vab (decrease of 287±350 mL). In patients, the greater the increase in EEVcw at Wpeak, the smaller the reductions in end-expiratory Vab and the greater the increase in end-expiratory Vrc. In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease patients with different spirometric disease severity, greater degrees of exercise-induced dynamic chest wall hyperinflation were accompanied by lower degrees of end-expiratory abdominal volume displacement and larger increases in end-expiratory ribcage volume.


Thorax | 2015

S98 Effectiveness of home maintenance tele-rehabilitation on COPD exacerbations

Giorgos Kaltsakas; Ai Papaioannou; Maroula Vasilopoulou; Stauroula Spetsioti; Sofianna Gennimata; Anastasios Palamidas; Nikolaos Chynkiamis; Eleni Kortianou; Theodora Vasilogiannakopoulou; I. Vogiatzis; Nikos Koulouris

Acute exacerbations are cardinal events in the natural history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and are associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Tele-monitoring interventions are a relatively new field in COPD research and management. Furthermore, the effect of home tele-rehabilitation on COPD exacerbation has not been thoroughly studied. Therefore, we set out to investigate whether a home tele-rehabilitation program would be as beneficial as an outpatient maintenance rehabilitation program, in the context of COPD exacerbations, following completion of a 3-month course of supervised pulmonary rehabilitation. We studied 137 Caucasian, ambulatory COPD patients. Forty seven patients were assigned to home maintenance tele-rehabilitation (FEV1,%pred = 50 ± 22, mean±SD). Fifty patients were assigned to twice weekly hospital-based maintenance rehabilitation (FEV1,%pred = 52 ± 17). Forty COPD patients (FEV1, %pred = 52 ± 21), were not assigned to any rehabilitation program and served as controls. Tele-rehabilitation included home exercise reconditioning, self-management techniques, dietary, and psychological advice. Patients were provided with tablets and wireless devices to record and transmit data, related to symptoms, lung function, and vital signs, to a tele-health platform. Patients were followed up for 12 months. At baseline there were no significant differences amongst the tele-rehabilitation (3.3 ± 3.1), hospital-based rehabilitation (3.4 ± 1.9), or control (3.3 ± 1.6), groups in terms of COPD exacerbations. After 12 months, COPD exacerbations in the group of home tele-rehabilitation were significantly reduced to 1.7 ± 1.7. In the group of hospital-based rehabilitation COPD exacerbations were also significantly reduced to 1.8 ± 1.4. In contrast, in the control group COPD exacerbations remained unchanged (3.5 ± 1.7). There were significant difference amongst the two rehabilitation groups (tele-rehabilitation and hospital-based) and the control group in terms of COPD exacerbations (p < 0.001). In conclusion, ongoing home tele-rehabilitation with the use of tele-monitoring could significantly reduce COPD exacerbations and seems to be as beneficial as an outpatient hospital-based maintenance rehabilitation program in the context of COPD exacerbations. Thus, tele-rehabilitation may constitute a satisfactory alternative rehabilitative strategy to diminish health care costs.


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

LATE-BREAKING ABSTRACT: Increasing physical activity in patients with COPD using a telecoaching program: A multicenter RCT

Heleen Demeyer; Zafeiris Louvaris; Rebecca Tanner; Noah Rubio; Anja Frei; Corina de Jong; Elena Gimeno Santos; Maarten Spruyt; Matthias Loeckx; Sara Buttery; Claire Yerramasu; Gilbert Buesching; Alexandra Strassmann; Ignasi Serra; Roberto Rabinovich; I. Vogiatzis; Michael I. Polkey; Judith Garcia Aymerich; Thierry Troosters


European Respiratory Journal | 2015

Tele-coaching to promote physical activity in patients with COPD: Evaluation by patients

Heleen Demeyer; Zafeiris Louvaris; Anja Frei; Corina de Jong; Matthias Loeckx; Gilbert Buesching; Sara Buttery; Maarten Spruyt; Rebecca Tanner; Noah Rubio; Elena Gimeno-Santos; Nicholas S. Hopkinson; Roberto Rabinovich; Michael I. Polkey; Judith Garcia-Aymerich; I. Vogiatzis; Thierry Troosters


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2015

Compliance With A Three Month Telecoaching Program To Enhance Physical Activity In Patients With Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease

Matthias Loeckx; Zafiris Louvaris; Rebecca Tanner; Claire Yerramasu; Gilbert Buesching; Anja Frei; H Oosterom; Maarten Spruyt; C de Jong; E Gimeno-Santos; C Perez; Roberto Rabinovich; I. Vogiatzis; Milo A. Puhan; Michael I. Polkey; J. Garcia Aymerich; Thierry Troosters; Heleen Demeyer

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Thierry Troosters

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Heleen Demeyer

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Zafeiris Louvaris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Zafiris Louvaris

National and Kapodistrian University of Athens

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Matthias Loeckx

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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