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Clinical Trial Summary

The purpose of this study is to develop a tai-chi based exercise program designed for patients who recently had a heart attack and do not wish, or are unable, to attend traditional cardiac rehabilitation.


Clinical Trial Description

We will estimate the feasibility, acceptability and safety of two different doses of the Tai Chi intervention (primary outcome). 60 patients (30 per dose arm) will be randomly assigned to a standard dose of Tai Chi (the dose used by our group in large studies of heart failure patients) or to a high dose matching the recommended frequency and duration of exercise classes in current CRs. Acceptability assessments will include surveys and focus groups to formally assess the impact of Tai Chi on facilitators and barriers to CRs in this population. We will also obtain estimates of effect sizes of each dose on accelerometry measured physical activity and on the proportion of patients achieving the current American Heart Association (AHA) recommendation for physical activity (secondary outcome). Additional outcomes will be cardiac fitness, quality of life, body weight, and sleep. In addition, we will gather exploratory information on possible mechanisms by which Tai Chi training may affect physical activity. We will collect information on possible mediators such as exercise self-efficacy, perceived social support, and depression. In addition, since Tai Chi training is associated with meditative practices aimed at increasing present-moment awareness, we will gather information on mindfulness levels. Measurements will be conducted at baseline, 3-, 6-, and 9 months after enrollment. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02165254
Study type Interventional
Source The Miriam Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 2014
Completion date December 2016