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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03275038
Other study ID # 201612213RINB
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received August 30, 2017
Last updated September 5, 2017
Start date August 31, 2017
Est. completion date July 31, 2020

Study information

Verified date March 2017
Source National Taiwan University Hospital
Contact Pei-Fang Tang, PhD
Phone 02-33668128
Email pftang@ntu.edu.tw
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In this three-year project, investigators will target on sedentary middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks, prescribe 24-week Tai Chi or aerobic exercises and examine:

1. Whether both exercises are effective to reduce cardiovascular risks, prevent leukoaraiosis and associated declines in physical and psychological functions at Week 12 and 24;

2. Will Tai Chi exercises be more effective on improving psychological health (cognition, psychological well-being, and exercise self-efficacy) than aerobic exercises at Week 12 and 24? If yes, are these effects mediated by specific brain structural and functional mechanisms?

3. Will aerobic exercises be more effective on improving physical health (motor functions, physical fitness, and heart rate variability) than Tai Chi exercises at Week 12 and 24? If yes, are these effects mediated by other specific brain structural and functional mechanisms?

4. After 12 and 24 weeks of Tai Chi and aerobic exercises, what are the relationships between reduction of cardiovascular risks and changes in brain structure and functions?

An assessor-blind randomized controlled clinical trial will be used. Based on known effect size of Tai Chi exercises on cognitive function (please refer to CM03, pages 9-10), 120 sedentary middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks will be recruited and randomly assigned to the Tai Chi, Aerobic, or Control (usual care) group. The Tai Chi and Aerobic groups will receive three one-hour exercise sessions weekly for 24 weeks, supervised for the first 12 weeks and unsupervised for the next 12 weeks. The Control group will maintain the original life style. Clinical measures of cardiovascular risks and blood markers, brain structures and functional images, psychological (cognitive, psychological well-being and exercise self-efficacy) and physical (motor functions, physical fitness, and heart rate variability) functions will be collected at baseline, Week 12, and Week 24 to compare differences among the three groups across the three time points. Investigators will also examine the interrelationships of changes in brain structural and functional organization with changes in other measures, in an effort to understand the neural mechanisms of exercise effects.


Description:

Leukoaraiosis prevails in middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks. People with more severe leukoaraiosis would have greater risks for stroke, dementia, and disability. Tai Chi and aerobic exercises both can reduce cardiovascular risks; however, it remains unknown whether these two types of exercises also could prevent leukoaraiosis and associated declines in physical and psychological functions. In particular, would Tai Chi, a form of mind-body exercise, be more effective than aerobic exercises on improving psychological health with specific underlying brain structural and functional mechanisms? Would aerobic exercise be more effective than Tai Chi on improving physical healthy with different underlying brain structural and functional mechanisms?

Therefore, in this three-year project, investigators will target on sedentary middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks, prescribe 24-week Tai Chi or aerobic exercises and examine:

1. Whether both exercises are effective to reduce cardiovascular risks, prevent leukoaraiosis and associated declines in physical and psychological functions at Week 12 and 24;

2. Will Tai Chi exercises be more effective on improving psychological health (cognition, psychological well-being, and exercise self-efficacy) than aerobic exercises at Week 12 and 24? If yes, are these effects mediated by specific brain structural and functional mechanisms?

3. Will aerobic exercises be more effective on improving physical health (motor functions, physical fitness, and heart rate variability) than Tai Chi exercises at Week 12 and 24? If yes, are these effects mediated by other specific brain structural and functional mechanisms?

4. After 12 and 24 weeks of Tai Chi and aerobic exercises, what are the relationships between reduction of cardiovascular risks and changes in brain structure and functions?

An assessor-blind randomized controlled clinical trial will be used. Based on known effect size of Tai Chi exercises on cognitive function (please refer to CM03, pages 9-10), 120 sedentary middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks will be recruited and randomly assigned to the Tai Chi, Aerobic, or Control (usual care) group. The Tai Chi and Aerobic groups will receive three one-hour exercise sessions weekly for 24 weeks, supervised for the first 12 weeks and unsupervised for the next 12 weeks. The Control group will maintain the original life style. Clinical measures of cardiovascular risks and blood markers, brain structures and functional images, psychological (cognitive, psychological well-being and exercise self-efficacy) and physical (motor functions, physical fitness, and heart rate variability) functions will be collected at baseline, Week 12, and Week 24 to compare differences among the three groups across the three time points. Investigators will also investigate the interrelationships of changes in brain structural and functional organization with changes in other measures, in an effort to understand the neural mechanisms of exercise effects.

Results of this study will not only provide scientific evidence basis for clinical decision-making of using exercise approaches to prevent the development of leukoaraiosis and its negative health impact in middle-aged and older adults with cardiovascular risks, but also reveal the underlying neural mechanisms.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 120
Est. completion date July 31, 2020
Est. primary completion date July 31, 2020
Accepts healthy volunteers Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Gender All
Age group 45 Years to 80 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

1. Age between 45 and 80 years old

2. Literacy

3. With cardiovascular risks, defined as having hypertension (defined as resting systolic BP?140 mmHg or resting diastolic BP?90 mmHg, or receiving antihypertensive medication), diabetes mellitus (defined as taking oral antidiabetics or insulin or fasting plasma glucose being =100 mg/dL), dyslipidemia (defined as receiving lipid-lowering medication and diet therapy or total cholesterol > 200 mg/dL or triglyceride > 150 mg/dL (Lan et al., 2008)), or a combination of two or three of these risks

4. Being physically inactive (defined as being engaged in physical activities for less than a total of 90 minutes per week) in recent one year

5. Have no prior experiences with Tai Chi, yoga, chi gung, or other meditative forms of exercises

6. No expectation of the need of changing medication in the following 8 months from the physicians

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Having any contraindications for fMRI (e.g., claustrophobia and indwelling metals or implanted devices)

2. Serious or uncontrolled cardiac or metabolic conditions (e.g., unstable angina, serious cardiac arrhythmias, heart failure, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, severe aortic or carotid stenosis, pulmonary embolus or infarction, resting systolic BP = 180 mmHg, resting diastolic BP = 110 mmHg, fasting plasma glucose = 300 mg/dL)

3. Severe renal failure

4. Symptoms or history of neurological diseases, including transient ischemic attack

5. Severe musculoskeletal disorders which would affect their mobility

6. Dementia or inability to follow instructions

7. Psychiatric disorder

8. Having contraindications for doing exercises (e.g., resting systolic BP = 180 mmHg, resting diastolic BP = 110 mmHg, fasting plasma glucose = 300 mg/dL, hypoglycemia (plasma glucose = 70 mg/dL) after exercises, and postural hypotension (BP drop = 20 mmHg when changing postures)

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Tai-Chi exercise
Behavioral: Tai-Chi exercise
Aerobic exercise
Behavioral: Aerobic exercise

Locations

Country Name City State
Taiwan National Taiwan University Collage of Public Health Taipei Zhongzheng

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
National Taiwan University Hospital

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Taiwan, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Brain functional activation and structure imaging fMRI activation patterns and white and gray matter changes of the brain up to 6 months
Secondary Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly assess daily physical activity up to 6 months
Secondary Geriatric Depression Scale short-form assess emotional status up to 6 months
Secondary Mindfulness Attention Awareness Scale assess mindfulness and attention up to 6 months
Secondary The AD8 scale A brief informant interview to detect dementia baseline
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