Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trial
Official title:
Health Benefits of a 6-month Brisk Walking Program in Sedentary Postmenopausal Women : a Randomized Controlled Trial
Community-dwelling women aged 55 or over are recruited at public meetings aimed at promoting
physical activity in postmenopausal women. Women are eligible and enrolled in the study if
they have no significant disease affecting lower limb function and if they have a sedentary
lifestyle. All study participants provide written informed consent to participate to the
study.
Women are then randomized either to the control group (women have to maintain their
lifestyle) or to the exercise group : 40 minutes of brisk walking 3d/wk for 6 months (two
supervised sessions and one session performed one their own per week with a detailed
program). The intensity of the program is adapted to the heart rate work and gradually
increases over the 6-month program. The objective of the study is to determine the health
benefits of brisk on walking ability, diet, muscle strength, balance, blood pressure, bone
density, body weight, lean and fat mass, depression symptoms, behavioral, emotional
responses, sleep quality, and biological indicators of health.
Community-dwelling women aged 55 or over are recruited at public meetings aimed at promoting
physical activity in postmenopausal women.
Women are eligible and enrolled in the study if they meet the following criteria : (i) not
diagnosed with any of the following conditions: rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis,
ischemic heart disease, previous joint replacement surgery or cerebrovascular disease
affecting lower limb function, malignant tumors, (ii) without pain and medication known to
alter physical performance (e.g., corticosteroids, estrogens, statins, or anti-estrogen
drugs). To recruit a sample of asymptomatic sedentary postmenopausal women, women with a
score value above 9.4 at the Physical Activity Questionnaire for the Elderly (PAQE) (Serres,
Gautier, Varray, & Préfaut, 1998) and a 5-minute walking distance (6MWD) greater than105% of
the predicted 6MWD based on Troosters' reference equation are excluded. The Troosters'
reference equation is:
Before entering the study, women are asked to provide a medical certificate of no
contraindication to performing the 6MWD.
Women are then randomized either to the control group (women are asked to maintain their
lifestyle, and especially their physical activity habits) or to the exercise group.
The exercise intervention consists in 40 minutes of brisk walking 3d/wk for 6 months. During
the 6-month program, subjects are required to attend 2 outdoor supervised sessions per week,
and to exercise 1d/wk on their own, with a detailed and tailored program. The intensity of
walking is adapted by skilled exercise trainers to individual physical capability of each
subject. Considering that the theoretical maximum heart rate (HR) of the subject is 208-0.7
* age (Tanaka, Monahan, & Seals, 2001), the training starts at 40% of HR work (difference
between maximum HR and HR at rest). Training intensity is gradually increased to finally
reaching 75% of the HR work. Participants wear a heart rate monitor (Polar Elctro Inc,
Woodbury, NY) during each of the 3 weekly sessions and the content of each session is
collected in a notebook (meters walked, duration of the brisk walking exercise, HR,
adherence to the program).
This study is approved by the Committee for Protection of Human Subjects (CPP
Sud-Méditerranée III, Number: 2008.07.04). All study participants provide a written informed
consent to participating to the study.
The objectives of the study are to determine the health benefits of the intervention program
in comparison to the control group in several domains.
Mesurements at baseline and at the end of the study comprise:
- Body composition (bone density, body lean and fat mass by dual-energy X-ray
absorptiometry (DXA) (Hologic QDR-1500 device, Hologic, Waltham, MA, USA);
- The subjects are weighed on an electronic scale to the nearest 0.1 kg, and their height
is measured to the nearest 0.1 cm to calculate the body mass index (BMI)(kg/m²).
- Endurance training performance is estimated by the distance walked during the 6-minute
walk test (6MWT). The 6MWT is performed according to the American Thoracic Society
(2002) guidelines in an indoor corridor (ATS, 2002).
- Maximum grip strength and isometric maximum knee extension strength are measured after
a warm-up session, as previously described (Blain et al., 2010).
- The Diet over the previous 7 days using the questionnaire used in the SUVIMAX study
- Sleep quality
- Depression score : French version of the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) (Beck, Steer,
& Carbin, 1988; Cathébras, Mosnier, Lévy, Bouchou, & Rousset, 1994). The BDI contains
cognitive (e.g., pessimism, worthlessness) and physical (e.g., fatigue and loss of
energy) subscales. The BDI has been shown to be sensitive to exercise-induced changes
in healthy adults (Stein & Motta, 1992).
- Baseline physical activity, covering household activities, sports, and leisure
activities is assessed using PAQE (Voorrips, Ravelli, Dongelmans, Deurenberg, & Van
Staveren, 1991). The activities of walking outside, bicycling, and doing heavy
housework are summed to a physical activity score (range, 0-3). Respondents not
participating in any activity are given zero points, whereas three points corresponds
to participation in all three activities.
- Subjective health status is assessed with the following item: In comparison to people
with the same age, you consider your health as better (1), equal (2), worst (3) ?.
- The Tampa Scale for Kinesiophobia (TSK) is a 17-item questionnaire that assesses the
fear of (re)injury due to movement (Swinkels-Meewisse, Swinkels, Verbeek, Vlaeyen, &
Oostendorp, 2003). Women are asked to make ratings of their degree of agreement with
each of the 17 statements. Ratings are summed to yield a total score where higher
values reflect greater fear of (re)injury (French, France, Vigneau, French, & Evans,
2007).
- Balance is assessed using a force platform (Medicapteurs France SAS) with two
conditions tested, eyes open (EO) and eyes closed (EC), lasting 51.2 seconds each and
separated by a 30-second rest period. The COP trajectories in antero-posterior (AP) and
medio-lateral (ML) directions are sampled at 40 Hz, leading time series with length of
2048.
Traditional stabilometric measures : the AP and ML standard deviations (SDx and SDy, mm),
the effective COP path length (mm), and the area of the 90% confidence ellipse enclosing the
COP (mm²).
Complexity measures of postural sway : The complexity of postural sway is quantified by
means of three measures : Percentage of determinism of recurrence quantification analysis
(DETRQA) , Sample entropy (SampEn), Complexity index of multiscale entropy (CIMSE)
- The adherence rate to the brisk walking program is calculated based on the data
recorded in the notebooks (number of supervised and self-reported home based walking
sessions performed/72 sessions of the program).
- Individual content of the training (meters walked measured with a podometer; total
duration of the walking exercises, mean HR, etc…).
- Fasted morning blood samples are collected at baseline and at the end of the study and
aliquots are frozen at −80 °C until analysis.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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