Physical Activity and Education in the Care of IBD: The Role of the Physiotherapist—A Narrative Review
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Narrative Review
3.1. Role of Physical Activity in IBD
3.2. Recommended Forms of Exercise in IBD
3.3. The Role of Physiotherapists in Regular IBD Care
3.4. The Role of Patient Education
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
| IBD | Inflammatory bowel diseases |
| CD | Crohn’s disease |
| UC | ulcerative colitis |
| QoL | quality of life |
| EIMs | extraintestinal manifestations |
| PA | physical activity |
| CRP | C-reactive protein |
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| Author (s) | Type of Exercise/Questionnaire | Study Design | Disease | No. of Patients | Duration | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ng et al. (2007) [35] | low intensity walking | RCT | CD | T = 32 IV = 16 C = 16 (remission to mild disease activity) | 12 weeks (3/week) | Improved QoL with the intervention. |
| Loudon et al. (1999) [36] | walking program | prospective | CD | T/IV = 12 (remission to mild disease activity) | 12 weeks (3/week) | All measures showed improvement by the study’s end, with a trend toward BMI reduction and no disease flares. |
| Lamers et al. (2021) [37] | walking program | prospective | UC + CD | T= 56 IBD = 37 C = 19 (disease activity was not defined) | 4 days | Changes in cytokine concentrations were similar between IBD and non-IBD walkers. |
| Robinson et al. (1998) [25] | low-impact exercise program of increasing intensity | RCT | CD | T = 117 IV = 60 C = 57 (disease activity was not defined) | 12 months | There was a statistically significant increase in BMD at the greater trochanter. |
| Sharma et al. (2015) [39] | Yoga | RCT | UC + CD | T = 100 Yoga: UC = 30 CD = 20, standard treatment: UC = 30 CD = 20 (disease in remission) | 8 weeks (1 h/day) | There was a significant reduction in state anxiety. |
| Klare et al. (2015) [34] | moderate intensity running | RCT | UC + CD | T = 30 IV = 15 C = 15 (mild to moderate disease activity) | 10 weeks | Scores on the IBDQ social subscale significantly improved. |
| Elsenbruch et al. (2005) [41] | stress management training, moderate exercise | RCT | UC | T = 45 IV = 15 C = 15 healthy = 10 (remission to mild disease activity) | 10 weeks | Patients in the intervention group had significantly greater improvements on the SF-36 and IBDQ Bowel Symptoms scales compared to controls. |
| Jones et al. (2020) [30] | combined impact and resistance training | RCT | CD | T = 47 IV = 23 C = 24 (disease in remission) | 6 months | Improved BMD and muscle function were observed. |
| Cronin et al. (2019) [31] | combined aerobic and resistance training (moderate intensity) | RCT | UC + CD | T= 20 IV = 13 C = 7 (disease in remission) | 8 weeks | Physical fitness improved without worsening disease activity, along with changes in body composition. |
| van Erp et al. (2021) [32] | aerobic- and progressive-resistance training at personalized intensity | prospective | CD + UC/IBD-U | T = 25 UC = 3 CD = 21 IBD-U = 1 (disease in remission) | 12 weeks | A personalized exercise program significantly improved fatigue, HRQoL, and cardiorespiratory fitness. |
| Seeger et al. (2020) [42] | endurance training or Muscle training | RCT | CD | T = 45 C = 13 IV = 32 (remission to mild disease activity) | 12 weeks | Both forms of exercise improved strength and well-being, and increased QoL in intervention groups. |
| Tew et al. (2019) [33] | HIIT and MICT | RCT | CD | T = 36 (HIIT = 13 MICT = 12) C = 11 (remission to mild disease activity) | 12 weeks | HIIT did not worsen disease activity, and was associated with few adverse events. |
| Gerbarg et al. (2015) [24] | BBMW (breathing, movement, meditation) | RCT | UC + CD | T= 29 IV = 16 C = 13 (disease activity was not defined) | 26 weeks | The BBMW group showed significant improvements from baseline to week 6. |
| Ratajczak-Pawłowska et al. (2023) [26] | International Physical Activity Questionnaire | Cross-sectional | UC + CD | T = 50 C = 24 (disease activity was not defined) | BMD scores were significantly lower in IBD patients than in healthy controls, with no differences in PA duration among the groups. | |
| Holik et al. (2019) [23] | Physical Activity Questionnaire | Cross-sectional | UC + CD | T = 312 (disease activity was not considered) | 24% of patients were not on therapy, and daily PA was linked to inactive disease. |
| Author (s) | Study Design | Method | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tormey et al. (2019) [63] | prospective | interview with 112 patients | Low health literacy in IBD is linked to poorer perceived health, higher depression rates, and more active symptoms, particularly in Crohn’s disease. |
| Zare et al. (2020) [64] | cross-sectional | interview with 26 patients | Participants placed the greatest emphasis on self-care and psychological coping strategies. |
| Robinson et al. (2001) [65] | RCT | 206 patients (The interval between relapse and treatment, and rates of primary and secondary care consultation, QoL, and acceptability to patients.) | Self-management in ulcerative colitis helps deliver treatment faster, reduces doctor visits, and does not increase health risks. |
| Mikocka-Walus et al. (2014) [69] | cross-sectional | online mixed-methods survey was conducted with health professionals caring for IBD patients | Among 135 respondents, 50% were GI physicians, 34% nurses, 8% psychologists, 4% dietitians, 2% surgeons, 1% psychiatrists, and 1% physiotherapists. |
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Kovács, Z.; Bacsur, P.; Kasza, B.B.; Molnár, T.; Domján, A. Physical Activity and Education in the Care of IBD: The Role of the Physiotherapist—A Narrative Review. J. Clin. Med. 2025, 14, 8602. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14238602
Kovács Z, Bacsur P, Kasza BB, Molnár T, Domján A. Physical Activity and Education in the Care of IBD: The Role of the Physiotherapist—A Narrative Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine. 2025; 14(23):8602. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14238602
Chicago/Turabian StyleKovács, Zita, Péter Bacsur, Blanka Bernadett Kasza, Tamás Molnár, and Andrea Domján. 2025. "Physical Activity and Education in the Care of IBD: The Role of the Physiotherapist—A Narrative Review" Journal of Clinical Medicine 14, no. 23: 8602. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14238602
APA StyleKovács, Z., Bacsur, P., Kasza, B. B., Molnár, T., & Domján, A. (2025). Physical Activity and Education in the Care of IBD: The Role of the Physiotherapist—A Narrative Review. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 14(23), 8602. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm14238602

