Pain Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of 8-weeks Mild Exercise Training on "Invisible" Symptoms and Quality of Life in Ambulatory and Non-ambulatory (EDSS From 0.0 - 8.0) Individuals With Multiple Sclerosis: a Randomized Controlled Trial
Verified date | April 2019 |
Source | University of Rijeka |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) struggle on a daily basis with accompanying,
"Invisible" symptoms like primary fatigue, pain and emotional-cognitive disorders. With the
disease progression, these symptoms only intensify, and in combination with basic physical
symptoms, quality of life (QOL) rapidly decreases.
An important goal of researchers and clinicians involves improving the QOL of individuals
with MS, and the exercise therapy represents potentially modifiable behavior that positively
impacts on pathogenesis of MS and these "Invisible" symptoms, thus improving the QOL.
However, the main barrier for its application is low motivational level that MS patients
experience due to fatigue with adjacent reduced exercise tolerability and mobility, and
muscle weakness. Getting individuals with MS motivated to engage in continuous physical
activity may be particularly difficult and challenging, especially those with severe
disability or Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS 6-8).
Till now, researchers have focused their attention mainly on the moderate or vigorous
intensity of exercise and on cardiorespiratory training in MS patients to achieve
improvements in daily life quality, less indicating the exercise content, and most
importantly, breathing exercises.
In addition, it is investigators intention to make exercise for MS patients more applicable
and accessible, motivational and easier, but most important, productive.
Investigators think that MS patients experience more stress with aerobic exercise or moderate
to high intensity program exercise, and can hardly keep continuum including endurance
exercise, or treadmill.
Hypothesis:
Investigators hypothesis is that 8-weeks of continuous low demanding or mild exercise program
with the accent on breathing exercise can attenuate primary fatigue, pain, headaches,
emotional-cognitive and sleep dysfunctions in MS patients and provide maintenance of exercise
motivation. Investigators also propose that important assistant factor for final goal
achievement is social and mental support of the exercise group (EDSS from 0-8) led by a
physiotherapist. This will help to maintain exercise motivation and finally make better
psychophysical functioning, and thus better QOL.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | February 5, 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | February 5, 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 80 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Individuals with multiple sclerosis (EDSS 0-8) - Ambulatory and non-ambulatory (in wheelchairs) Exclusion Criteria: - Individuals with contraindications for exercising - Individuals with multiple sclerosis with EDSS over 8 |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Croatia | University of Rijeka, Faculty of Medicine, Department of Physiology, Immunology and Pathophysiology | Rijeka |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
University of Rijeka |
Croatia,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change of fatigue intensity | Fatigue estimation using the "Modified Fatigue Impact Scale" (MFIS) questionnaire. This test gives an assessment of tiredness effects on physical, cognitive and psychosocial functioning and can therefore be treated as 3 separate categories. In full-time MFIS consists of 21 questions. The time to complete is 5-10 minutes and the examinee can solve the test without the help of an interviewer. The total points are obtained by summing all the answers or the additions are made separately by the mentioned categories. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change of pain intensity | Assessment of pain level using a "Visual Analogue Scale" (VAS) for pain. It is a psychometric response scale or a measurement instrument for subjective characteristics that cannot be directly measured. Here, the participants state their degree of agreement with the facial expression shown with the description of the pain in words, including the appropriate number below the image. The VAS for pain is 5 units long, 0 to 5 (0-no pain and 5-hardest possible pain). | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change in quality of life | Evaluation of Quality of Life using the abbreviated version of the "36-Item Short Form Survey" (36-SF) including physical function, role of constraints due to physical problems, physical pain, general health perception, energy level, social function, the role of limitations due to psychological problems and general mental health. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change in sleeping quality - ISI | Evaluation of sleeping quality using ISI questionnaire. The test is designed to assess the nature, severity, and impact of insomnia and it consists of 7 items: Severity of sleep onset, sleep maintenance and early morning wakening problems, sleep dissatisfaction, interference of sleep difficulties with daytime functioning, notice ability of sleep problems by others, distress caused by the sleep difficulties. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change in sleeping quality - PSQI | Evaluation of sleeping quality using PSQI questionnaire. The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) is an effective instrument used to measure the quality and patterns of sleep in adults. It differentiates "poor" from "good" sleep quality by measuring 7 areas (components): subjective sleep quality, sleep latency, sleep duration, habitual sleep efficiency, sleep disturbances, use of sleeping medications, and daytime dysfunction over the last month. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change in psychological symptoms | The CORE-OM has 34 items, all with the same five level response choice, and covers the last seven days. It was designed, and this was led partly by the commissioning specification, to cover four main domains: wellbeing, problems, functioning and risk and has 4, 12, 12 and 6 items focused on those domains respectively. The original scoring was the mean across the items, i.e. between 0 and 4 as the scoring of the item responses is from 0 to 4, more recently, to require fewer decimal places, scores have often been reported after multiplying that by ten. Caution should be used to make sure whether results are reported with that x10 multiplier though it is rarely likely that results can be confused as to scoring. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Headache-Migraine intensity and frequency | Survey Survey made from questions for subjective self-evaluation of Headache-Migraine intensity and frequency. | baseline, up to 8 weeks | |
Secondary | Motivation evaluation | Survey made from questions for subjective self-evaluation of motivation efficiency. | up 8 weeks |
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