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Frailty clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Frailty.

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NCT ID: NCT04636970 Completed - Frailty Clinical Trials

Unobtrusive Technologies for Monitoring of Autonomic Nervous System Function in Elderly Frail Patients

FrailHeart
Start date: November 19, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

To develop and investigate an unobtrusive technology for long-term monitoring of autonomic nervous system (ANS) function's response to daily physical stressors and exercise training for elderly patients with different frailty stages.

NCT ID: NCT04630132 Recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

Renal Ageing-sarcopenia Network

Start date: March 25, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Frailty is a syndrome in which the accumulation of small, individually insignificant deficits leads to heightened vulnerability to adverse events and predisposes to potential catastrophic decompensation. Objective of this study is to clarify the underlying genetic and immunological mechanisms responsible of frailty condition focused on: i. nephrosclerosis ageing kidney phenotype related to salt effects on immunosystem, ii. immunological aspect of sarcopenia, iii. psychological disorder related to immunosystem activation, iv. detection of new biomarkers of frailty.

NCT ID: NCT04629690 Completed - Frailty Clinical Trials

SOLAR- Frailty Screening and Multidisciplinary Assessment of Older Adults in the Emergency Department

SOLAR
Start date: November 9, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

SOLAR is a randomised control trial exploring the role of Comprehensive Geriatric Assessment (CGA) in older adults who screen positive for frailty based on the Identification of Seniors at Risk (ISAR) tool the the Emergency Department and Acute Medical Assessment Unit of a University Teaching Hospital.

NCT ID: NCT04628754 Completed - Sarcopenia Clinical Trials

A Randomized Control Trial of an Intervention to Reverse Frailty and Enhance Resilience Through Exercise and Education

REFEREE
Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Resistance training done at home and protein supplementation may be the most effective and easiest to implement interventions to reverse frailty and build resilience. However, it is not common practice to offer and support such interventions in primary care. This study provides an opportunity to assess the effectiveness of an optimised intervention with community-dwelling adults aged 65 and over, whose baseline clinical frailty score is not worse than mild (i.e. 5 or less), evaluate improvements in health outcomes and demonstrate how the intervention may be incorporated efficiently in clinical practice. The results are intended to encourage mainstream adoption of practical interventions to reverse clinical frailty and build resilience in primary care. An intervention with ten recommended resistance exercises and dietary guidance on protein consumption has been derived from findings of our systematic review and meta-analysis and optimised through a patient and public involvement (PPI) process and feasibility study.

NCT ID: NCT04615065 Recruiting - Sepsis Clinical Trials

Acutelines: a Large Data-/Biobank of Acute and Emergency Medicine

Acutelines
Start date: September 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Research in acute care faces many challenges, including enrollment challenges, legal limitations in data sharing, limited funding, and lack of singular ownership of the domain of acute care. To overcome some of these challenges, the Center of Acute Care of the University Medical Center Groningen in the Netherlands, has established a de novo data-, image- and biobank named "Acutelines". Acutelines is initiated to improve recognition and treatment of acute diseases and obtain insight in the consequences of acute diseases, including factors predicting its outcome. Thereby, Acutelines contributes to development of personalized treatment and improves prediction of patient outcomes after an acute admission.

NCT ID: NCT04612686 Recruiting - Frailty Clinical Trials

Characterising Frailty Using Magnetic Resonance Imaging

PHENOFRIM
Start date: July 5, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Ageing is associated with the development of various negative conditions, such as frailty. Defined as a decreased ability to combat negative stressors (e.g. injury and illness), frailty is highly prevalent in elderly adults and significantly increases an individual's risk of adverse events such as falls, illness and death. The underlying physical characteristics of frailty are currently incompletely understood, with many previous studies focusing on one tissue (e.g. the brain) in isolation. However, frailty is known to affect many tissues simultaneously, and to further our insight into the biological basis of frailty and how to treat it, we must determine how different organs are affected at the same time. The study will look at the physical characteristics of non-frail and frail elderly females (aged 65 years and over), who are attending geriatric clinics across the Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. We will aim to recruit 51 participants with this cohort broken down into non-frail (n=17), pre-frail (n=17) and frail (n=17) subgroups. Participants will be allocated to these groups based on their Electronic Frailty Index, Clinical Frailty Scale and Fried frailty phenotype scores. All participants will undergo basic muscle function tests (grip strength, leg strength and muscle activity) and questionnaires on their first visit to University of Nottingham laboratories. At a second visit, they will then undergo one Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scanning session, at the Sir Peter Mansfield Imaging Centre within the University, to gather information about the structure and function of their heart, brain and skeletal muscle. MRI scan protocols will take approximately 45-60 mins. Data gathered from MRI scanning will be compared across non-frail, pre-frail and frail groups to investigate differences across frailty states, with the aim of highlighting the defining physical characteristics of the frail state which may help to develop future treatment interventions to combat the condition. We hypothesise that frail females will present with common physical characteristics, the clustering of which will be indicative of frailty severity. We also hypothesise that certain physical traits present in the frail will not be present in the non-frail.

NCT ID: NCT04605029 Completed - Critical Illness Clinical Trials

Frailty, Outcomes, Recovery and Care Steps of Critically Ill Patients

FORECAST
Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

This pilot study will study the impact of critical illness and ICU processes of care on the trajectory and development of frailty. It is hypothesize that frailty in survivors of critical illness will be measurable at hospital discharge, will correlate with processes of care while in ICU and will better discriminate long term outcomes when compared to severity of illness or the degree of frailty present on ICU admission. This pilot study will be conducted in a tertiary medical surgical ICU at Kingston General Hospital- Kingston, Ontario. It will inform the feasibility, timelines and sample size for the multi-center study and will allow for the refinement of study procedures and data collection methods. This study will be published separately as a stand-alone pilot.

NCT ID: NCT04603144 Not yet recruiting - Clinical trials for Community Dwelling Individuals Aged 50 and Over

Identification of Frailty Predictors of Adverse Health Outcomes in Community-dwelling Individuals Aged 50 and Over

SUCCEED
Start date: December 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Introduction. Although ageing is a general phenomenon, a great inter individual variability on the quality of ageing can be observed. This substantial heterogeneity may be partly explained by extrinsic factors such as lifestyle, habits, physical activity, diet, which may play an important role in the age-associated declines. The concept of frailty was introduced to account for variability in the aging process. This clinical and biological syndrome reflects a decrease in the physiological reserve, and leads to an insidious, precarious equilibrium that can break down during a stressful life event. In older adults, frailty is known to be associated with an increased risk of adverse outcomes, such as falls, fractures, unplanned hospitalizations, and death. Several frailty domains may only be slightly altered, so that early-stage frailty is not necessarily clinically visible. The most commonly used operational definitions of frailty are based on two different conceptual frameworks. Fried's rules-based criteria correspond to a physical phenotype, whereas the "Rockwood accumulative model" defines frailty as the accumulation of multiple deficits. These tools were built for individuals aged 65 and over. However, frailty can also be found in younger adults. Although the early detection of frailty is potentially important (since the condition might be reversible in its early stages), frailty has not been extensively investigated among middle-aged individuals. Indeed, most of the literature studies have focused on older adults or on a small number of frailty parameters the investigators hypothesized that the factors determining the main ageing-related adverse events are already present in middle age. The main objectives of the SUCCEED cohort are therefore to 1/investigate the prevalence of frailty parameters in community-dwelling individuals aged 50 and over, 2/ assess the parameters' prognostic value for future adverse health events, 3/ investigate frailty classifications in this population and assess the evolution of profiles over time Method. The SUCCEED survey is a French retrospective and prospective cohort that includes community-dwelling individuals aged 50 years or over consecutively attending an outpatient clinic ("successful ageing") in a geriatric teaching hospital in the Paris area, France. Baseline parameters are collected using a self-administered questionnaire followed by an interview, physical measurements, and performance tests conducted by trained nurses, and then a standardized clinical evaluation by a geriatrician. This clinical assessment includes evaluation of autonomy, cognition, mood, balance, mobility, muscle strength, nutrition, comorbidities, continence, sensory functions, bone density, sleeping disorders. Patients who have attended the outpatient clinic from the 01/01/2010 to 14/01/2020 are retrospectively included in the cohort, the other ones are prospectively included.

NCT ID: NCT04602260 Active, not recruiting - Covid19 Clinical Trials

Functional Recovery of Hospitalised Patients With COVID-19: The COREG Extension Study

Start date: June 9, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Older adults and those with chronic underlying health conditions are the most susceptible to COVID-19 and its complications. Although there has been a rapid response to studying the effects of COVID-19 in the acute stages, little is known about recovery over the longer-term. Older adults who survive the diseases are at risk of developing persistent mobility limitations due to extensive bed rest during hospitalization. For older patients and those with underlying frailty recovering from COVID-19, this could rapidly lead to significant physical deconditioning and rapid declines in mobility. Understanding the trajectory of functional recovery of older hospitalised patients with COVID-19 in the short- and long-term is critical to improving patient outcomes and informing health and rehabilitative interventions for survivors.

NCT ID: NCT04602026 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Malignant Solid Neoplasm

The RIOT Trial: Re-Defining Frailty and Improving Outcomes With Prehabilitation for Pancreatic, Liver, or Gastric Cancer

RIOT
Start date: September 14, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This trial studies how well a prehabilitation program works to improve patient outcomes after surgery compared to the normal standard of care prehabilitation in frail patients undergoing surgery for pancreatic, liver, or gastric cancer. Frailty is defined as the pathophysiology of aging or through the accumulation of physiologic and functional deficits. Prehabilitation programs seek to optimize the medical and physical state of patients prior to undergoing surgery with the goal of improving outcomes following surgery. Despite evidence for its importance in health outcomes for frail patients, prehabilitation programs have not been well studied in cancer surgery populations. This trial may provide researchers with more information on how to improve patient outcomes after cancer surgery through the use of prehabilitation programs.