View clinical trials related to Sarcopenia.
Filter by:This study will determine the effect of 6 months of supplementation with krill oil on muscle strength and mass in middle-aged adults. The study hypothesis is that krill oil supplementation will increase muscle strength and mass in middle-aged adults.
The goal of this pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) is to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and the preliminary effects of the MIndfulness-based Physical Exercise (MIPE) intervention among community-dwelling older people with sarcopenia. The main questions are: 1) is the MIPE intervention feasible and acceptable in older adults with sarcopenia? 2) is the MIPE intervention effective to improve the adherence to physical exercise intervention, alleviate the symptoms of sarcopenia and enhance the psychological well-being of older adults with sarcopenia? To answer these questions, a MIPE intervention protocol was developed by Delphi approach and end-users' evaluation. This pilot RCT will be conducted to assess the feasibility, acceptability, and the preliminary effects of the MIPE intervention. In the parallel-group, pilot RCT, 60 community-dwelling older people aged 60 years or older diagnosed with sarcopenia will be randomized into either the intervention group receiving the MIPE intervention 2 sessions weekly over 12 weeks or the control group receiving health educations. Each session of the MIPE intervention will last about 70 minutes, including 20-min mindfulness-based intervention, 40-min physical exercise (10-min warm-up, 20-min RE, and 10-min cool down) and 10-20-min sharing and discussion. The feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness on sarcopenia symptoms and psychological well-being of the MIPE program will be assessed.
Osteoarthritis (OA) knee is one of the commonest chronic degenerative conditions. It causes disability in elderlies due to pain and stiffness. The prevalence of radiologic knee osteoarthritis increases in proportion to age, reaching an astounding 64.1% for patients who are over 60 years of age. In 2021, there were over 26,000 patients on the Hospital Authority (HA) waiting list for knee total knee replacement (TKR) and with only 4300 TKRs performed, the nominal waiting time for TKR was almost 89 months. Low vitamin D can adversely affect cartilage thickness and study suggested that low serum vitamin D is associated with increased radiographic knee OA progression. A systematic review concluded that vitamin D supplements can improve pain and function in patients with knee OA. Vitamin D has long been recognized for its effect on musculoskeletal health and increasing attention has been focused for its effect on muscle function. Vitamin D have a direct effect on muscle hypertrophy by acting on specific vitamin D receptors (VDRs) on myocytes, and sufficient levels of vitamin D in patients have been found to correlate with an increase in the size, number, and strength of muscle fibres. Vitamin D also seems to exert beneficial effects by its interplay with myokines such as myostatin and irisin. One study also showed that muscle nuclear VDR was increased by 30% and augmented muscle fibre size by 10% in elderly females (mean age of 78 years) taking vitamin D orally at a rate of 100 µg/day (4000 IU/day) for 4 months. This will be a double-blinded RCT investigating the effect of vitamin D supplements or knee muscle strength, physical function, pain symptoms and, sarcopenia status. The study will be a follow-up study with assessment at baseline, 3- ,6-and 12-months post vitamin D intervention.
This is a single-center, prospective, randomized, double-blind (pharmacotherapy), placebo-controlled, and comprehensive physiotherapy and nutritional intervention phase II clinical trial to determine the usefulness of nandrolone decanoate in a new indication (sarcopenia). Patients will be randomized 1:1 to receive nandrolone decanoate (50 mg intramuscular injection over four visits every 3 weeks) or placebo (1 ml volume equivalent to 50 mg intramuscular nandrolone decanoate dose) for 12 weeks (83-85 days ). Both groups will receive comprehensive physiotherapy and nutritional intervention. There will be 5 outpatient visits to the research center. The procedures and assessments performed as part of the study are listed in the study schedule. It is planned to include 168 patients in the study, which, assuming a 10% level of non-completion of the program, will result in the examination of 152 patients (76 in each arm). The study will cover people aged over 60 to 99 years of age with confirmed muscle weakness measured with a hand dynamometer (< 27 kg for men and 16 kg for women) and with a decrease in: muscle mass of upper and lower limbs (ASMM) (7.0 kg/m2 height in men and 5.5 kg/m2 in women) or total muscle mass of the upper and lower extremities (< 20 kg in men and < 15 kg in women) by densitometry.
In order to prevent sarcopenia in intensive care patients and to guide nutritional therapy, evaluation of muscle thickness with ultrasonography is a modern, simple and non-invasive procedure routinely performed by Anesthesiology and Reanimation specialists. Sarcopenia in intensive care patients has been demonstrated in many studies. It has been studied that routine examination of changes in rectus femoris muscle thickness by ultrasonography is a predictor of sarcopenia. However, the muscles in the neck region, such as the sternocleidomastoid muscle, which are easy to examine, have not been studied very well. There is no study in the literature with the sternocleidomastoid muscle. For this reason, we decided to examine the relationship of sternocleidomastoid muscle thickness with patient characteristics, treatments, feeding route and type, feeding time, length of stay in intensive care unit, as in routine measurements of rectus femoris muscle thickness by ultrasonography.
This trial is a prospective multi-center study. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of dietary supplement combined with supervised exercised on the physical performance, body composition and lung function among patients with Sarcopenia and severe Sarcopenia in chronic lung disease. After participants enroll in this study, 12-week clinical trial will be conducted to analyze the improvement regarding Sarcopenia and different severity of Sarcopenia before and after the intervention of exercise and nutritional products, which can further provide reference for clinical intervention and rehabilitation.
This study is investigating changes to the proteins in skeletal muscle that contribute to reduced muscle size and muscle function that occurs with aging.
The goal of this randomized controlled trial] is to investigate the effects of a 12-week time restricted eating (TRE) and exercise combined intervention, as compared to (i) TRE alone, and to (ii) Caloric Restriction (CR) plus the same exercise intervention elicited by the TRE group, on Skeletal muscle tissue (SMT) quantity, quality and function (primary outcome), Resting energy expenditure (REE) and cardiometabolic health (secondary outcomes), and miRNA biomarkers in postmenopausal women with overweight or obesity.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of Pennisetum purpureum health food supplementation on muscle mass and muscle strength.
The goal of this observational study is to compare glycemic control and irisin levels in subjects with diabetes mellitus type 2 with sarcopenic obesity vs non-sarcopenic obesity. The main questions it aims to answer are: Is glycemic control worse in diabetic patients with sarcopenic obesity? Are irisin levels higher in patients with non-sarcopenic obesity? Participants will be asked to: - Fill in three questionaries on lifestyle - Perform two physical performance tests The investigators will collect the following data: - Anthropometric measurements - Body composition by bioelectrical impedance analysis. - Results of routine blood analyses - Irisin levels by drawing a vial of blood from the antecubital vein