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Prehabilitation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06049693 Completed - Endometrial Cancer Clinical Trials

Iron Prehabilitation in Endometrial Cancer

IROGYN
Start date: January 1, 2023
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

Endometrial cancer patients often have iron deficiency anemia before surgery, which can be effectively treated with oral iron supplementation. Anemia and blood transfusions have been previously associated with perioperative infectious diseases. In the present study the investigators will evaluate the impact of perioperative iron supplementation on the incidence of perioperative infections.

NCT ID: NCT05352789 Completed - Clinical trials for Stem Cell Transplant Complications

Nutrition and Metabolic Prehabilitation in HSCT Patients UK and ROI. BSBMT Multi-centre Survey.

Start date: August 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To explore current practices of nutrition and metabolic screening, assessment and management prior to Haematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant (HSCT) in UK and ROI transplant centres. Nutrition and metabolic parameters assessed in the survey include glycaemic control, lipid function, liver function, nutritional screening, nutritional assessment, nutrition intervention (tube feeding, diet, micronutrient) and exercise. This work will be used to inform the design of a UK dual centre feasibility study of personalised nutrition and metabolic care for HSCT patients prior to transplantation.

NCT ID: NCT04422665 Completed - Sarcopenia Clinical Trials

Preventing Bed-rest Induced Muscle Loss in the Elderly

Start date: September 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Episodes of inactivity due to hospitalisation, as short as 5 days, are associated with rapid muscle and strength loss in the elderly. The observed muscle loss with inactivity is likely due to muscle anabolic resistance and increased breakdown rates of muscle tissue. This is of great concern as the average hospital stay in the elderly is 5-6 days. Moreover, minor illnesses not requiring hospitalisation generally require short-term periods of inactive home-based recovery. The accumulation of repeated disuse events in older individuals manifests in a chronic muscle anabolic resistance (i.e. the inability of muscle to respond to anabolic stimuli such as exercise and nutrition) that may underpin the slow but devastating process of age-related muscle loss. It is our belief that strategies to promote muscle health in ageing and reduce healthcare expenditure, should focus on alleviating muscle deterioration and anabolic resistance during short-term disuse. In this regard, we propose that resistance exercise (i.e. weight lifting) performed prior to a disuse event (termed 'prehabilitation') may be sufficient to offset muscle loss in older individuals. Thus, we suggest the potent effect of resistance exercise in older muscles may prevent muscle loss during short-term disuse.

NCT ID: NCT04247776 Completed - Colorectal Surgery Clinical Trials

Pragmatic Prehabilitation for Colorectal Surgery

Start date: December 1, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Colorectal surgery is a common surgery for the treatment of colon and rectal cancers as well as other bowel diseases. Recovery from colorectal surgery is difficult because of the many potential negative side effects. These side effects include surgical complications, infections, and long hospital stays. It usually takes several months for patients to recover the strength required to return to their typical daily activities. The Enhanced Recovery After Surgery program was established in Alberta in 2013 and uses several strategies to improve short-term patient recovery, including earlier discharge from hospital. Whether the ERAS program also improves long-term patient recovery, including quality of life and return to activities of daily living, is unclear. Whether the ERAS program would benefit from the addition of a prehabilitation element is unclear. Prehabilitation programs are designed to use the waiting period before colorectal surgery to better prepare patients emotionally and physically for their operation. To date, successful prehabilitation programs have used a personalized care strategy where each patient is provided specific care instructions by healthcare professionals to meet their unique exercise, nutrition, and psychological needs. This prehabilitation strategy has been criticized for not being sustainable in our healthcare system. A new prehabilitation program in response to this criticism is proposed. The prehabilitation program will be conducted in a more sustainable way by offering the program as a group class with a home-based component. ERAS patients at the Peter Lougheed Center are already offered a group class as part of the standard ERAS program. The prehabilitation class will be an extension of this group class that provides general nutrition, exercise, and anxiety-reduction/relaxation strategies to help patients prepare physically and emotionally for their operation. At this class, patients will learn to eat well, practice deep breathing exercises for relaxation, perform simple functional exercises, and to walk for exercise before their surgery. The surgical experience and outcomes of patients who received the additional prehabilitation care will be compared to those who received ERAS care only. The overall goal of the study is to better understand how ERAS supports recovery after surgery and whether a prehabilitation program offers any additional benefits to the ERAS program currently in place.

NCT ID: NCT04073381 Completed - Prehabilitation Clinical Trials

Application of Ergogenic Aids to the Prehabilitation of Abdominal Cancer Patients Undergoing Cancer Surgery

Start date: October 28, 2018
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of the proposed study is to measure surgical recovery, including the length of hospital stay, incidence of perioperative complications, and mortality at 90 days post-surgery, in surgical patients with abdominal cancer. The investigators hypothesize that this prehabilitation program will improve recovery and reduce perioperative complications via the proposed prehabilitation intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03915093 Completed - Prehabilitation Clinical Trials

Effect of Prehabilitation Protocol on Quality of Life After Thoracoscopic Surgery

VATS
Start date: October 4, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

video-assisted thoracic surgery (VATS) is a new approach used in cardio thoracic surgery department instead of thoracotomy to treat several diseases.patients underwent thoracoscopic surgery without organized educational protocol either before or after the procedure. Therefore, this study will be the first clinical research which will increase patients' knowledge about thoracoscopy and decrease its complications.

NCT ID: NCT03886909 Completed - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

Impact of Prehabilitation in Oncology Via Exercise- Bone Marrow Transplant

IMPROVE-BMT
Start date: June 28, 2019
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether patients are able to participate in a prehabilitation program (prior to the beginning of treatment) which includes: (1) a home-based exercise program or (2) just a prehabilitation education session.

NCT ID: NCT03498157 Completed - Breast Cancer Clinical Trials

IMpact of PRehabilitation in Oncology Via Exercise - Breast Cancer

IMPROVE-B
Start date: October 15, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine whether patients are able to participate in a so called prehabilitation program (prior to the beginning of cancer treatment) which includes (1) a supervised and home-based exercise program plus one educational session or (2) just home-based exercise plus one educational session or (3) just one educational session. Breast cancer surgery may have potential for several side effects, including functional (e.g. flexibility in the affected arm, lymphedema [swelling that generally occurs in the arms or legs that occurs as a result of the removal of or damage to lymph nodes as a part of cancer treatment], shoulder pain) and psychosocial (e.g. reduced quality of life, increased fatigue) aspects. Evidence shows that exercise is considered to be an effective treatment approach in breast cancer patients during and after treatment with regard to the above mentioned side-effects. Also, prehabilitative exercise in colon and lung cancer patients was shown as feasible and effective. However, no experience exits with regard to prehabilitation exercise in breast cancer patients.

NCT ID: NCT03158402 Completed - Thoracic Surgery Clinical Trials

Preoperative Inspiratory Muscle Training Effects on the Perioperative Inflammatory Reaction in Cardiac Surgery.

EMI HiPo
Start date: February 14, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study evaluates the impact of preoperative high-intensity inspiratory muscle training (IMThi) before cardiac surgery on perioperative inflammatory response. Half participants will receive high intensity inspiratory muscle training and the others a sham inspiratory muscle therapy.

NCT ID: NCT03068507 Completed - Lung Cancer Clinical Trials

The Impact of Trimodal Prehabilitation Strategy on Patients Undergoing Thoracoscopic Lobectomy

Start date: April 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The process of enhancing an individual's functional capacity to optimize physiologic reserves before an operation to withstand the stress of surgery has been coined prehabilitation. This is a prospective randomized controlled trail, designed to explore if the patients who take thoracoscopic lobectomy for lung cancer will benefit from family trimodal prehabilitation strategy. Trimodal prehabilitation includes exercise, nutrition supplement and physiology management preoperatively. It starts from the day that patients decide to take the surgery until the day before surgery, lasting 2~3 week in our hospital. And we follow-up patients until 8 weeks after surgery to investigate if trimodal prehabilitation strategy can improve the postoperative functional recovery,reduce complications and improve prognosis.