Diabetic Neuropathies Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effect of Exercise on Gait and Balance in Peripheral Neuropathy
The purpose of this study is to find out if participation in one of the study groups: functional balance training, Tai Chi, or education, results in better outcomes overall. The outcomes that we are primarily interested in are related to walking ability and balance.
Since the 1970's, researchers and epidemiologists have documented that patient falls are a
high-risk, high volume, high cost adverse events contributing to morbidity, mortality,
decreased quality of life, and premature nursing home placement. Despite thousands of
research studies published on patient falls, few studies have focused on the effectiveness
of interventions , and fall rates and associated injuries among the elderly continue to
rise. Impaired gait and balance (referred to as impaired stability) is one of the most
significant causes and consequences of falls. Persons with peripheral neuropathy represent
one of the largest patient populations with impaired stability. Lower limb peripheral
neuropathy (LLPN) includes sensory and motor impairments that result in impaired gait and
balance, jeopardizing safe mobility. Emerging evidence suggests that exercise programs can
be effective in improving gait and balance in general fall risk populations, as well as
reducing falls and fall-related injuries. Exercise interventions have been designed to
reduce fall risk and promote successful aging. These interventions come in many forms, but
the most common interventions are exercise training and Tai Chi, offered individually and in
small group formats. Further research is needed to gain insight into the underlying
mechanisms of different type of exercises and their impact on stability in veterans with
LLPN. Research is needed to determine the type or combination of types of exercise to
produce a more normal and/or stable gait in this high-risk patient population. Researchers
are beginning to document that exercise interventions positively influence a person's fall
self efficacy, i.e. self confidence for avoiding a fall, an important factor in
understanding and examining a persons' behaviors related to fall risks. The emphasis on
functionally based interventions has led to inappropriate broad groupings of older persons
with mobility disorders. A weakness of previous studies was that they aggregated
heterogeneous patient populations, resulting in neurological and musculoskeletal diagnostic
heterogeneity and the confounding of results. Focusing on a homogeneous patient population
is necessary to distinguish unique sensory, gait and balance deficits that contribute to
impaired stability and mobility risk, as well as to better understand unique responses to
treatment that are clouded when diverse patients are aggregated. We will target veterans
with LLPN--one of the largest groups of patients referred to our Falls Clinic, and an
understudied population with respect to safe patient mobility. This will allow us to design
targeted interventions likely to be more effective than those tested on heterogeneous
elderly populations, where visual and vestibular input to compensate for impaired
proprioception were not taken into account.
The goal of this study is to improve successful adaptation to aging and quality of life in
veterans with lower limb peripheral neuropathy (LLPN). Functional Balance Training and Tai
Chi, the two exercise interventions tested in this study, have been documented to improve
gait and balance, and decrease falls and associated fall-related injuries in the general
elderly population. We are interested in whether one or both of these exercise interventions
(successful in general elderly populations) would be effective in a special subpopulation of
elderly, namely persons with LLPN.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness of these two exercise
interventions and an education control group. Effectiveness will be assessed by studying the
impact of interventions on (1) composite measures of stability (gait and balance), (2) fall
self-efficacy, and (3) patient acceptance. Given the well-documented links between falls and
fall-related injuries (ultimate outcomes) our study will focus on stability (intermediate
outcome). Because falls and fall-related injuries are relatively rare events, examining
stability as an outcome will allow us to have sufficient power to test our hypotheses with a
relatively small sample size thereby decreasing the cost and duration of the study without
sacrificing the rigor of the research design.
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Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Subject, Investigator), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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