View clinical trials related to Muscle Atrophy.
Filter by:Patients lose a significant amount of muscle following major abdominal surgery. This is partly due to a catabolic response to the surgical insult and inflammation, but is also probably due to a lack of muscle use secondary to immobility. This study will aim to assess whether some or even all of postoperative muscle loss in the upper leg muscle group is preventable through electrical muscle stimulation to mimic physical activity.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether massage can attenuate the loss of muscle mass in humans after a short period of disuse.
This study involves minimally-invasive techniques to measure muscle mass, muscle protein breakdown and synthesis simultaneously in older age.
Postoperative protocols for orthopedic procedures on the lower limb often require a period of immobilization to protect the surgical site. The consequence of this immobilization is muscle atrophy which can be severe, delaying a patient's return to activity and predisposing them to recovery complications or subsequent injury (1)(2). The current standard methods to assess lower limb muscle atrophy all have their respective limitations. Thigh circumference or isokinetic strength values are indirect measures of atrophy and can be inaccurate. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) is time-consuming and expensive. Computed tomography imaging of muscle CSA is expensive and exposes the patient to radiation (3). For these reasons, none of the current methods are ideal for regular use in the clinic. Musculoskeletal ultrasound is a promising measurement tool to assess muscle atrophy in postoperative patients. Ultrasound is non-invasive, cost-effective, does not involve radiation, and can give direct images of muscle size (4). Musculoskeletal ultrasound requires further research on its potential as an evaluation tool for postoperative lower limb orthopedic patients-specifically, whether ultrasound is a reliable and valid tool for quadriceps size measurements.
This study will examine the influence of n3 PUFA supplementation on the rate of muscle atrophy in older women undergoing 1 week of unilateral limb immobilization. Assessments in skeletal muscle strength and skeletal muscle volume will also me made before, after and in recovery from immobilization.
The effect of different protein intakes on skeletal muscle atrophy during short term unilateral leg immobilisation.
The goal of this study is to determine the impact of pre-diabetes and type 2 diabetes on muscle atrophy during a period of bed rest and recovery of muscle mass, strength, and physical function following bed rest.
The primary aim of this research proposal is to examine whether this novel training program approach is capable to tackle excessive loss in muscle mass, function and contractile capacity with aging. Previous investigations have universally shown a dramatic loss in type II muscle fibers, while certain countermeasures in their follow-up studies were generally ineffective and limited to attenuate this phenomenon. Probably, they failed to meet recruitment threshold of larger motor units and subsequently innervate type II muscle fibers. Furthermore, previous investigations also failed to provide any data on specific blood markers that may provide additional insight into muscle fiber loss with aging. Muscle fibers type II play a crucial role in the human ability to produce as much as force as possible over a limited time-frame (e.g. 100-200 ms) to counteract unexpected perturbations during stair climbing for example and thus avoiding falls. Therefore, this data collection would be noteworthy in particular, especially for this population due to health-related outcomes and healthy aging process. Since age-related decline is accelerated already after short bouts of physical inactivity, with small recovery potential, any attempt to counteract age-related and disuse-related decline have high clinical significance. Based on the findings, data collected may aid in development of safety guidelines and protocols aimed at reducing health risks in this specific population. Importantly, in case the aforementioned hypotheses are confirmed, present findings may offer important information to the healthcare system, especially for reducing economic burden.
Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) has recently been combined with blood flow restriction (BFR) in controlled trials and has shown increased muscular strength and size compared with NMES and BFR on their own. However, none have used BFR pressures previously recommended. The first study of my Ph.D. found 40% and 80% BFR pressures to induce acute fatigue and muscle swelling. However, 80% caused higher ratings of pain and perceived exertion. The present study will determine whether NMES combined with either 40% or 80% BFR causes greater structural muscular adaptations and is perceptually easier after 6 weeks of training.
Visits to the emergency department (ED) for chest pain are extremely common and require a safe, rapid and efficacious treatment algorithm to exclude a possible AMI. These diagnostic algorithms are partly based on an important laboratory value, which showed growing utility in the diagnostic and prognostic of many cardiovascular diseases in the last years : cardiac troponin. However, some patients with muscle disease often present with unexplained elevated high-sensitive cardiac Troponin T (hs-cTnT) levels in the absence of cardiac disease. The investigators aim at the characterization of the behaviour of this biomarker and its alternative (high-sensitive cardiac Troponin I), which will have important clinical implications on patients management.