Therapeutic Exercise for Hospitalized Sarcopenic Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Chan-Fook, Olivier; Martin Núñez, Javier; Raya Benítez, Julia; Navas Otero, Alba; Cabrera Martos, Irene; Valenza, Marie Carmen; Heredia Ciuró, AlejandroEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Sarcopenia Hospitalization Therapeutic exercise
Fecha
2025-09-12Referencia bibliográfica
Chan-Fook, O.; MartinNúñez, J.; Raya-Benítez, J.; NavasOtero, A.; Cabrera-Martos, I.; Valenza, M.C.; Heredia-Ciuró, A. Therapeutic Exercise for Hospitalized Sarcopenic Patients: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Sports 2025, 13, 326. https://doi.org/10.3390/sports13090326
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Education (grant number FPU:22/01543)Resumen
Sarcopenia is a progressive and generalized skeletal muscle disorder associated with an
impairment of functional status, increasing dependency and mortality. The high prevalence
among hospitalized patients has increased interest in active interventions such as exercise;
however, the effectiveness of therapeutic exercise in this population remains unclear. This
systematic review with a meta-analysis aims to evaluate the effectiveness of therapeutic
exercises in hospitalized patients diagnosed with or at risk of sarcopenia. A systematic
search was conducted in Medline, Web of Science, and Scopus databases following PRISMA
guidelines. Randomized controlled trials assessing therapeutic exercises for sarcopenic
or at-risk hospitalized patients were included. Methodological quality was evaluated
using the TIDieR Checklist and the ROB2 tool. We performed a meta-analysis addressing muscle strength, physical performance and cognitive function. Six studies met the
inclusion criteria, with a total of 1468 participants. Similar interventions were observed,
including mainly resistance and balance exercises. Therapeutic exercises demonstrated
significant improvements in physical performance (2.98 (1.13–4.83); p = 0.002; I2 = 99%),
muscle strength (2.11 (0.20–4.01); p = 0.03; I2 = 99%) and cognitive function (0.77 (0.25–1.29);
p = 0.004; I
2 = 98%) across several studies. Therapeutic exercises appear to improve sarcopenic outcomes in hospitalized patients, supporting their role as a non-pharmacological
intervention to mitigate sarcopenia-related complications. However, due to the lack of
reported muscle mass outcomes, as well as the limited number and methodological quality
of the included studies, further well-designed trials are needed to confirm these findings.





