View clinical trials related to Elderly.
Filter by:About 18% of independent people over 65 who are evaluated in Emergency Departments for minor injuries (fractures, sprains) present some mobility decline up to 3 to 6 months postinjury. People at risk of decline are prefrail or frail; this condition could be explained by muscle proprieties loss. Exercise is a proven method that can help limit frailty and allow to restore mobility. The aim of our study is to evaluate whether a suitable exercise program of one hour, twice a week for 12 weeks will limit functional losses & fragility in injured older adults after their emergency department visit.
CARTIER (Cardiotoxicity in the elderly) is a prospective cohort study of newly diagnosed elderly cancer patients equal or greater than 65 years of age conduced in one tertiary center (Hospital Universitario de Salamanca at Spain. The study is academically funded in its integrity by The Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities). The investigators of the study are the only responsible for the study design, data collection, and data interpretation. All study participants provide written informed consent. All enrolled patients will undergo serial surveys, 6-minutes walking test (6MWT), electrocardiogram, echocardiogram, blood samples, CMR, physical examinations and multidisciplinary clinical evaluations; before each chemotherapy cycle and at 3, 6, 9 and 12 months, 3 years and 5 years after finalization of chemotherapy, except for MRI that will be performed before 1st, 3rd, 5th cycles and at 3, 6, 9,12 months, 3 years and 5 years after chemotherapy ending
In communities with over 100,000 residents, to investigate the incidence and mechanisms of fall in elderly, and strategies of fall prevention.
In France, for general practitioners, the Emergency Hospitality Services (UAS) are the fastest and usual way to respond to the complexity of managing elderly polypathological patients. In 2013, the Regional Health Agencies proposed the creation of direct telephone assistance managed by geriatric doctors (geriatric hotlines) to promote interactions city - hospital. The aim of these hotlines is to improve the care pathways and health status of seniors. The objective of this study is to describe the care trajectories and health status of subjects over 75 years of age hospitalized in a short-term geriatric stay on the guidance of a Geriatric Hotline. The study will take place over 24 months and in 7 French University Hospitallers Centres. The study will include all patients aged 75 and over, living at home or in an institution, who are hospitalized in a short-term geriatric ward on the guidance of a Hotline. The results will show whether a management by the geriatric hotline is the most suitable for seniors, with an average length of stay probably shorter.
This study will measure the oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetics of known bioactive compounds from a standardized Centella asiatica water extract product (CAP) in mildly demented elders on cholinesterase inhibitor therapy. Compound levels will be measured in human plasma and urine over 10 hours after acute oral administration of two doses of the botanical extract product. The dose giving maximum plasma levels (Cmax)closest to those observed in the investigator's mouse studies, the area under the curve (AUC0-12), as well as the rate of clearance (t ½) of the known compounds and time of maximum concentration (tmax), will be identified. These data will be used to inform decisions on the dosage and dosing frequency for future clinical trials.
This study will measure the oral bioavailability and pharmacokinetics of known bioactive compounds from a standardized Centella asiatica water extract (CAW) product (CAP) in cognitively healthy elders.
The elderly will be recruited, after meeting the inclusion criteria, will be submitted to data collection, all necessary assessments for the study and after 12 weeks, the same data will be collected, so that the elderly are self-control. After the second collection, the elderly will be randomized into two groups: the Muay Thai group and the functional training group. Both groups will train three times a week for 60 min and for 12 weeks. The training will be divided into 20 min of general exercises, 20 min of specific exercises and 20 min of fight simulation and/or play activities. At the end of the 12 weeks of intervention, evaluations and data collection will be performed again.
Older people are increasing users of health care globally. Constraints in bed capacity and resources raise important challenges with regards to management of older people with complex needs, which usually require assertive and holistic assessment. It is important, therefore, to identify aged patients most likely to benefit from such frailty-attuned approaches of care. A previous study using national Hospital Episodes Statistics conducted in the United Kingdom (UK) showed that patients aged over 75 years with characteristics of frailty and at risk of adverse health-care outcomes can be identified using routinely collected data (Gilbert T et al., Lancet 2018). This study lead to the development of the Hospital Frailty Risk Score (HFRS), which is based on International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems 10 (ICD-10) diagnosis codes and has the potential to be used in other countries worldwide, using the ICD-10 coding framework, to identify patients at risk of frailty at the hospital and commissioners levels, as well as for database research purposes. This score has successfully been validated in Canada, Australia and Switzerland. The aim of the present study is to evaluate the ability of the HFRS to predict 30-day in-patient mortality of patients aged 75 years and older admitted to French hospitals as an emergency.
Multiple morbidity is increasing, especially in elderly people, with a corresponding increase in polypharmacy and inappropriate prescriptions. According to different evaluations, between 25 and 75% of patients aged 75 or older are exposed to 5 or more drugs. There is increasing evidence that polypharmacy can cause more harm than good, especially in elderly people, due to factors such as drug-drug and drug-disease interactions. Many strategies were proposed to reduce polypharmacy and inappropriate prescribing, but there is little evidence to show benefit. There is an urgent need to implement effective strategies. The application methodology must be simple so that it does not fail in daily practice. For the current plan, an electronic medical record, named "DrApp", will be used, which will include a drug interaction program, SIMDA, which will automatically indicate the medication prescriptions that involve a risk for the patient. The first indication of each patient admitted to two rooms of the Internal Medicine Department of the Hospital de Clínicas José de San Martín will be registered. The indications will be compared in the 4 months prior to the incorporation of the SIMDA program with the 4 months after the incorporation of the program. Between both stages a period of 2 weeks will be established in which the data will not be recorded. The minimum number of patients that will be included in each stage is 100. The primary end point is to compare the total number of indications per inpatient, before the availability of the SIMDA program and after the application of this program. The objective is to evaluate if the computer program of detection of drug interactions allows to limit the polypharmacy in hospitalized patients.
This study is designed as a single blind randomized controlled trial. Thirty-six elderly with non-specific low back pain (NSLBP) will be recruited. The participants will randomly divided two parallel groups as control and intervention. Traditional physiotherapy methods will be applied to all participants. Traditional physiotherapy will include heat modality (a hot pack for 15 minutes), electrotherapy (transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS), a 50 Hz conventional TENS with a pulse duration <150 microseconds). For the control group, core stability exercise will be applied 3 days/week, 6 weeks. For the intervention group, in addition to the core stabilization exercises myofascial relaxation technique will be performed with roller massager ((Thera-Band; The Hygenic Corporation, Akron, OH) 3 days/week, 6 weeks. The myofascial relaxation technique will be performed along the superficial back line. To the best of our knowledge, there is no randomized controlled study investigating the effect of the myofascial release technique combined with core stabilization in elderly with NSLBP. This study aimed to investigate the myofascial release technique combined with core stabilization exercise in elderly with NSLBP.