A preliminary British Journal of Dermatology study suggests that ulcers in the legs may heal faster with exercise.

In the study of 39 patients with who were randomized to compression therapy plus supervised exercise (including aerobic, resistance and flexibility elements) or only, ulcer healing time was lower in the (13 versus 35 weeks).

"Although this is a feasibility study and we can't draw any final conclusions from it, our findings suggest that people with ulcers not only enjoy taking part in a supervised exercise scheme, staying in the programme until the end, but may also draw multiple benefits from it, offering reduction in treatment costs as well," said chief investigator and lead author Dr. Markos Klonizakis, of Sheffield Hallam University, in the UK.

"Having proven that such a programme is workable for everyone involved, we will now seek funding to test the main study hypothesis in seven regions across England."

More information: M. Klonizakis et al, Supervised exercise training as an adjunct therapy for venous leg ulcers: a randomised controlled feasibility trial, British Journal of Dermatology (2017). DOI: 10.1111/bjd.16089

Journal information: British Journal of Dermatology

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