View clinical trials related to Frailty.
Filter by:Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common arrhythmias in clinical practice. Research investigating hospitalized patients have indicated there are deleterious effects of AF on patients besides the disease burden itself, including longer stay days for hospitalization, higher rates of frailty and increasing mortality rate after discharged in six months. In the community-dwelling research also found that elderly with AF have lower cognitive function, physical functional tests score and slower walking speed compared with the health ones. However, there is limited articles investigating the impact of AF on community-dwelling elderly, and the relationship between AF and frailty is also lack of discussion. According to the aged society and increasing prevalence of AF, the relationship between AF and frailty in community-dwelling elderly is warranting investigated.
The study aims to explore feasibility of implementing a tailored CGA to older adults with frailty and evaluate staff and patients perception of the intervention. In line with this, the objectives of the study are: 1. To assess applicability of finding older adults with frailty using eFI and delivering subsequent CGA and care planning at patients' home 2. To investigate staff and older adults' perception of CGA programme 3. To assess the health care resource usage and cost of the CGA programme 4. To measure key health related outcome domains including function, quality of life, loneliness, pain, falls and mobility.
A strategy involving 6 partners was planned, targeting the components of education, innovation, and practice-based research with knowledge transfer into clinical practice.The project MIND&GAIT aims to promote independent living in frail older people through the development of innovative initiatives and systems to improve cognition and gait ability. A structured and integrated Combined Intervention (CI) will be developed, composed by: cognitive stimulation program, an animal-assisted therapy program, a physical activity program. Moreover, an auto-blocking mechanism for rolling walkers will be developed and implemented in this study. The results of the study and all the material that was used, will be disseminated in a web platform.
Frailty is prevalent in older adults and may be a better predictor of post-operative morbidity and mortality than chronological age. Preoperative risk factors and physiological reserves were assessed on patients more than 70 years old who are scheduled for surgery under general or regional anesthesia. The aim of this retrospective analysis was to examine the impact of relevant geriatric assessments on adverse outcomes in older surgical patients.
Oncogeriatric frailty assessment is a multifactorial approach to determine the most appropriate treatment for the health status of elderly cancer patients and this assessment is recommended for patients over 75 years of age. Oncogeriatric frailty is based on the SIOG-2 (International Society of Geriatric Oncology-2) clinical scale (assessing comorbidities, autonomy, nutrition, cognitive and thymic domains) defining 3 levels of frailty: (1) harmonious aging, (2) vulnerability (reversible stage), (3) fragility (irreversible stage). So,the management of very old or very frailty patients with poor tolerance or compliance to treatment, often requires to defer standard treatment and monitoring procedures. That is detrimental to these patients prognosis. By contrast with elderly or very old patients without frailty criteria, could benefit from more efficient procedures. More generally, frailty is associated directly with a cerebral impact on a cognitive or thymic status or indirectly with the cognitive or thymic impacts related with other components (nutritional or autonomy or walking poor status, comorbidities) 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) Positron Emission Tomography (PET), is routinely performed in follow-up cancer patients in most cases, including older patients, to detect neoplastic localizations on the whole body. It also accurately quantifies cerebral glycolytic metabolism when early brain recording is performed. Brain metabolism reflects the neuronal synaptic activity. It is generally decreased in particular brain areas due of neurodegenerative damage with a little or no symptom, of thymic involvement particular in depression or during accelerated cerebral aging of vascular origin. The impairment of the brain function of the elderly, as evidenced by 18F-FDG PET, is most often multifactorial, as frailty. Above all, brain changes are visualized with 18F-FDG PET much earlier than using neuropsychological tests, especially for cognitive impairment. Our hypothesis is that with 18F-FDG PET, performed routinely in the initial assessment in elderly patients with cancer, it is also possible to obtain reliable and objective parameters of brain function and frailty. 18F-FDG PET is already used to identify cognitive and thymic impairment. This exam would help to assess the frailty and to adapt as best oncologic treatments some of which can also be neurotoxic. 18F-FDG PET is therefore related to brain function in frail patients
A safety and feasibility study of robotic exoskeleton training in deconditioned patients residing in a healthcare facility.
Study design. The study FRAGIREA is a multicentric prevalence study on the frequency of frailty among elderly patients and the quality of management. The voluntary ICUs will have to include all patients ≥ 70 years on a limited period (1 month) or until the number of 15 inclusions is reached. The frailty is going to be evaluated by a frailty score adapted to the ICU, based on informations given by the patient's family. It is a descriptive non-interventional study, aiming at the description of frequency of frailty and management of the patient in order to set-up a prospective future study on the potential role of early rehabilitation of ageing patients in ICUs.
Frail Veterans are at increased risk for poor surgical outcomes, and as the Veteran population grows older and more frail, there is a critical need to identify effective strategies for reducing surgical risks for these patients. Prior research shows that inter-disciplinary rehabilitation strategies deployed after surgery enhance recovery and improve outcomes by building strength and improving nutrition. The investigators believe that similar improvements may be obtained by using similar interventions before surgery to "prehabilitate" patients' capacity to tolerate the stress of surgery. The proposed research will examine the feasibility of a new, home-based prehabilitation intervention aimed at improving surgical outcomes after cardiothoracic surgery through preoperative exercise training and nutritional supplementation. Findings from the study will inform the design of a larger randomized controlled trial of the prehabilitation intervention. If proven effective, prehabilitation could benefit as many as 42,000 frail Veterans who are scheduled for major elective surgery each year.
In Reunion Island, people encounter environmental and social conditions leading to premature ageing and subsequent frailty. Social welfare has developped exercise programs to promote physical activity especially for elderly with higher risk factors of frailty, including low incomes. The study evaluates the potent benefit effect of such exercise program on physical performance and frailty improvement in seniors from Reunion Island. All seniors participate to a 12-weeks exercise program especially dedicated to this targeted population needs and ability.
Europe is undergoing a demographic change with a rapidly growing population of 65 years+. This challenges municipalities and hospitals as the ageing citizens need care and treatment due to an age-related decline in physical and mental capacity. Therefore municipalities are experiencing a growing need for sufficient and customized housing, which can support the elderly citizens in sustaining well-being and health along with preventing functional decline. Well-fare technologies, such as Circadian adjusted LED-based lighting (CALED), are suggested as a remedy for this. To obtain proper visual sharpness and better contrast, people of older age require heightened light levels due to age-related failing vision. Furthermore, inappropriate light at night disrupts not only sleep but also the timing of the circadian rhythm, with negative consequences on cognition and emotions. Therefore CALED is being increasingly considered for use in hospitals and elderly housing because of its wide spectrum of wavelengths, good contrast and fast switching, and possibility to support a normalised circadian rhythm. Lighting based on LED has been shown to improve the quality of sleep and to improve well-being in the elderly. However, it is not known whether CALED mimicking a normal circadian rhythm has the same benefits for elderly persons with frailty or dementia. The investigators therefore want to test the effects of CALED in elderly people with frailty and mobility disabilities and/or dementia living in elderly housing. The investigators hypothesise that CALED can improve sleep and well-being in both elderly with frailty and dementia.