Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01184547

Effects of a Community Based Exercise Program in Adults With Severe Burns

"Effects of a Community Based Exercise Program in Adults With Severe Burns"

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
45 (actual)
Sponsor
The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 60 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this proposal is to assess the efficacy of implementing a 12-week structured and supervised community-based exercise program (COMBEX) at hospital discharge. The investigators will assess the effect of exercise on mental health and physical function, along with its effects on the amelioration of the burn-induced catabolic response. The central hypothesis of this proposal is that exercise-induced physical and psychosocial benefits obtained during a supervised and structured COMBEX program in severely burned adults will improve physical function, and quality of life relative to Standard of Care (SOC).

Detailed description

The current Standard of Care in the physical rehabilitation of burned individuals is to discharge them home with prescribed written, physical and occupational therapy rehabilitation activities. We believe that a supervised and structured COMBEX program early during the recovery phase will increase physical function, translate into improvements in QOL, and produce results far superior to current Standard of Care. We intend with this study to eliminate the physical inactivity that occurs with the present standard of care and connect burned victims with COMBEX. This is also important since an inactive lifestyle is a health risk factor even in the physically-able individual. Thus, a fitter burned individual should more readily meet the physical demands of activities of daily living. Activities of daily living, whether occupational or leisure, are integrated functions requiring cardiovascular and muscle endurance and muscle strength. Therefore, successful rehabilitation programs need to also optimize cardiopulmonary and muscle endurance, strength and function; a need that exercise should fulfill. Additionally, a successful rehabilitation program should improve QOL and community engagement. Accordingly, in the present grant application, we propose using exercise as the integral and central interventional tool to counteract physical dysfunction in burned individuals, thereby improving overall functional physical capacity, but also preventing secondary conditions that result from prolonged or maintained physical inactivity and disability. Finally, this increase in physical capacity will allow for an improvement in the QOL of burned individuals, evidenced by increased psychosocial responses measured by increased self-esteem, social interaction, return to work, and decreased anxiety and depression. We propose to improve the current Standard of Care by the incorporation of a community-based, supervised, structured aerobic and resistive exercise rehabilitation program (COMBEX). In addition, our present grant proposal attempts to bypass the exercise training in a burn center and translate it into community based facilities. To our knowledge, our studies are the only prospective, randomized studies of exercise and the physiological or psychosocial responses to aerobic or resistance training and quality of life in burned adults.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALCombex12 weeks of exercise with a trainer post discharge.
BEHAVIORALStandard of CareNo exercise training received.

Timeline

Start date
2010-04-01
Primary completion
2020-01-01
Completion
2020-01-01
First posted
2010-08-19
Last updated
2020-11-06

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01184547. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.