View clinical trials related to Sarcopenia.
Filter by:The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of combination of aerobic and resistive exercise on activities of daily living and risk of fall in osteosarcopenic patients
Obesity is a metabolic disorder, characterized by an increase in the body's fat mass, which will reflect an increase in total body weight. In Brazil, overweight accounts for 53.8% of the population, and of these 18.9% are obese. Surgical treatment is currently the most successful method for weight loss in patients with Grade III obesity and reduced associated morbidities. The general objective is to evaluate genetic, inflammatory, and dietary factors that would influence weight loss and the appearance of protein deficiency or sarcopenia in patients undergoing bariatric surgery and to evaluate the effects of protein supplementation for 8 weeks after the 18th postoperative month in the parameters evaluated. The study has a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-masked model. The patients will be selected in two bariatric surgery services accredited by the Brazilian Health Unic System (SUS) in the city of Belo Horizonte, Brazil. The project has already been approved by the Brazilian Ethics committee CONEP/UFMG by nº. 75415317.8.0000.5149. Patients of both sexes over 20 years of age will be included, attending the hospitals of the project with regular follow-up in the postoperative period. Data on anthropometry, body composition, muscle strength, energy expenditure, and inflammatory profile will be collected. The data will be correlated with the evaluation of the presence of genetic polymorphisms.
This project was aimed to test the effects of a six-month VA program on the activities of daily living (ADL) and functional fitness of institutional older adults with sarcopenia.
The purpose of the study is to compare the effect of whey protein and collagen on fat free mass, muscle strength, functional ability, wound healing and life quality in elderly patients undergoing elective knee- or hip surgery (defined as elective knee- or hip arthroplasty). The patients are admitted at the department of Orthopaedic Surgery at Herlev Gentofte Hospital.
Sarcopenia is a generalized progressive skeletal muscle disorder that represents a related physiological vulnerability that is associated with or increases the likelihood of adverse outcomes, including falls, fractures, physical disability and death. The parameters used to assess sarcopenia in clinical practice have limited use due to their custody. In this perspective, this study proposes or develops a tool for the diagnosis of having sarcopenia with a specific boa and a sensitive boa. low cost and useful. Elderly patients (n = 403) from the Geriatrics Outpatient Clinic of Hospital das Clínicas, Faculty of Medicine, University of São Paulo will be selected This study was of clinical importance, due to sarcopenia and a relevant factor, and could lead to consequences and poor prognosis in patients with gold, and it was not a method of clinical practice to properly endorse body composition in this population.
Osteosarcopenia designates the simultaneous presence of sarcopenia and osteopenia; both chronic conditions of advanced age. Dynamic-resistance exercise (DRT) might be the most powerful agent to fight osteosarcopenia. Indeed, in the present FrOST study, we clearly determine the positive effect of slightly adapted 18 month high-intensity (HIT)-DRT on bone mineral density (BMD), sarcopenia and other health related parameters in osteosarcopenic men. However, after a short training break, COVID-19 induced lock down prevented a re-start of the HIT resistance exercise training in the FrOST cohort. The aim of the present observational study is thus to determine the effects of 6 months of deconditioning on health related parameters under special regard of osteosarcopenia in this cohort of older men with osteosarcopenia.
Episodes of inactivity due to hospitalisation, as short as 5 days, are associated with rapid muscle and strength loss in the elderly. The observed muscle loss with inactivity is likely due to muscle anabolic resistance and increased breakdown rates of muscle tissue. This is of great concern as the average hospital stay in the elderly is 5-6 days. Moreover, minor illnesses not requiring hospitalisation generally require short-term periods of inactive home-based recovery. The accumulation of repeated disuse events in older individuals manifests in a chronic muscle anabolic resistance (i.e. the inability of muscle to respond to anabolic stimuli such as exercise and nutrition) that may underpin the slow but devastating process of age-related muscle loss. It is our belief that strategies to promote muscle health in ageing and reduce healthcare expenditure, should focus on alleviating muscle deterioration and anabolic resistance during short-term disuse. In this regard, we propose that resistance exercise (i.e. weight lifting) performed prior to a disuse event (termed 'prehabilitation') may be sufficient to offset muscle loss in older individuals. Thus, we suggest the potent effect of resistance exercise in older muscles may prevent muscle loss during short-term disuse.
The association of diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) with sarcopenia has not been adequately investigated. Sarcopenia is characterized by progressive and generalized loss of skeletal muscle mass which may affect performance.
Aging is characterized by low-grade inflammatory state, supported by impairment oxidative balance and endocrine changes, leading to changes in: body composition, such as decrease in lean body mass and increase in adipose tissue; resting metabolic rate; immune function; cognitive impairment. According to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics all subjects over the age of 60 should be able to access to adequate nutrition and appropriate nutritional services. In order to ensure healthy aging and to reduce effects of specific diseases, recommendations are needed for illness and disability in this population, as well as adequate physical activity and specific support programs, culturally accepted. The aim of this study is to evaluate eating habits in term of food consumption, health state and lifestyle in a sample of free-living elderly over the age of 65, living in Milan and surroundings. In particular, profiling of the elderly population is performed using a survey in which information are collected on methods, contexts, time and ability to buy, prepare, consume and dispose of and recycle food. Eating habits and knowledge about food are detected through the analysis of food consumption frequencies, and lifestyle by assessing the level of physical activity, quality of sleep, smoking habit. Weight status and health status are evaluated through anthropometric measurements, body composition (bioelectrical impedance) and strength test. Other information relating to social participation and other socio-demographic variables (age, gender, family composition, socio-economic status) are collected to have a completed profiling of target population. Achieved results will help us to identify factors on which acting to ensure healthy aging and counteract inflammaging, the chronic low-grade systemic inflammation characteristic in the aging process. Moreover, the study allows increasing the knowledge related to the needs and requirements of the target population to determine a good food policy and to increase the elderly empowerment.
The aim of this study is to investigate the prevalence of sarcopenia in stroke patients; to determine the relationship between sarcopenia and duration of stroke, age, gender, etiology of stroke, ambulation status, spasticity, nutrition and malnutrition