Clinical Trials Directory

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UnknownNCT01581216

Fatigue Before and After Exercise in Patients With Advanced Cancer Stage

The Use of Physical Activity to Control Fatigue and Improve the Quality of Life in Patients With Advanced Cancer Stage

Status
Unknown
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
50 (estimated)
Sponsor
Barretos Cancer Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Fatigue related to cancer is the most common reported symptom and it prevents 91% of patients of having an active life, and in several cases, the fatigue persists for several months or even years after treatment. Fatigue does cause an impact in all dimensions of patients' quality of life and it is the main cause of reduction in patients' daily life activities. Fatigue is reported by cancer patients in all phases of the illness as one of the most frequent symptoms, especially in cases presenting metastases. In order to monitor fatigue, pharmacological and non-pharmacological techniques may be employed, such as physical activity. Physical exercise has shown positive results in mitigating fatigue improving cardiopulmonary functioning, physical capacity and patients' quality of life. This study will assess the efficiency of physical activity upon controlling the fatigue and quality of life in patients with advanced stage of the disease at the end of 7 days using FACT-F subscale.

Detailed description

Six minute walking test: a) Patients who walk a distance ≤ 300 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 10 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 30-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit; b) Patients who walk 300-450 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 20 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 30-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit; c) Patients who walk a distance less than 450 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 30 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 30-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit. Resistance exercise: Patient is assessed for the ability to use 1lb of dumbbell, if they are able to use easily then he has to use 2lb dumbbell. Dumbbell exercises during the first week are 10 repetitions, which will increase 10 repetitions per week, reaching a total of 40 repetitions on the last week. The exercises will be: 1. \- shoulder flexion 0-180º; 2. \- shoulder abduction and adduction; 3. \- shoulder extension; 4. \- elbow flexion; 5. \- wrist flexion and extension; Patients' will have monitored their blood pressure, heart/cardiac frequency ( 40-60% of HR RESERVE or 60-70% HR MAX) and oxygen saturation by way of a finger oximeter made by Digit and perceived effort = light sweating, increase HR and breathing. Daily walk in the Borg scale at the beginning, middle and end will be applied to evaluate the fatigue of the patient.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHER10 minute walkPatients who walk a distance ≤ 300 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 10 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 90-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit.
OTHER20 minute walkPatients who walk 300-450 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 20 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 90-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit.
OTHER30 minute walkPatients who walk a distance less than 450 meters in the 6-minute walk test will make a 30 minute walk once a day for 5 days for 4 weeks in a 90-feet long corridor located at the palliative care unit.

Timeline

Start date
2011-12-01
Primary completion
2015-12-01
Completion
2016-12-01
First posted
2012-04-20
Last updated
2015-08-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Brazil

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01581216. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.