Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03701854

Physical Impairments in Heart Failure Patients With Pacemakers

Comparison of Functional and Maximal Exercise Capacity, Respiratory and Peripheral Muscle Strength, Dyspnea and Fatigue in Heart Failure Patients With Pacemakers and Healthy Controls

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
138 (actual)
Sponsor
Gazi University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Despite major breakthroughs that have recently been made in pacemakers implanted in heart failure (HF) patients, it is clear that functional impairments and symptoms often remain. However, only limited studies have investigated exercise capacity, muscle strength, pulmonary function, dyspnea, and fatigue in pacemaker implanted HF patients. Therefore, investigators aimed to compare the aforementioned outcomes in patients and healthy controls.

Detailed description

Heart failure is a chronic, progressive condition in which the heart muscle is unable to pump enough blood through to meet the body's needs for blood and oxygen. Safeguarding HF patients at increased risk of sudden cardiac death due to ventricular arrhythmias and HF as a result of left ventricular systolic dysfunction and cardiac abnormal synchronization has continued to improve. Implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), which restore normal heart rhythm using pacing, cardioversion or defibrillation, and cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), which resynchronizes the contraction of the heart using biventricular pacing, are nowadays widely used to treat the aforementioned conditions. New developments in medical treatments have focused on the primary affected organs, targeting reduced left ventricular ejection fraction in chronic HF. Although major breakthroughs in the treatments have occurred in recent years, especially implantable medical devices, it is clear that when drugs are optimally prescribed, even the latest technology used in pacemakers reported problems, especially functional impairments and symptoms often remain. In recent decades, it has become obvious that disease severity should not be estimated from cardiac function impairment alone. However, what has not hitherto been clearly investigated is the fact that even functional and maximal exercise capacity, respiratory and peripheral muscle strength and pulmonary function are impaired, and dyspnea in the activities of daily living and fatigue perception increased in HF patients with pacemakers. Hence, investiators designed a prospective, cross-sectional study to compare the aforementioned outcomes in HF patients with pacemakers and healthy controls. Investigators hypothesized that functional and maximal exercise capacity, respiratory and peripheral muscle strength, and pulmonary function are impaired, and dyspnea in the activities of daily living, and fatigue perception increased in HF patients with pacemakers. A cross-sectional study. 50 HF patients with pacemakers and 40 controls were compared. Functional (6-Minute Walking test (6-MWT)) and maximal exercise capacity (Incremental Shuttle Walking test (ISWT)), respiratory (MIP, MEP; Mouth pressure device) and peripheral muscle strength (Dynamometer), pulmonary function (Spirometry) dyspnea (Modified Medical Research Council Dyspnea scale) (MMRC)), and fatigue (Fatigue Severity scale (FSS)) were evaluated.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2017-01-01
Primary completion
2018-08-30
Completion
2018-08-30
First posted
2018-10-10
Last updated
2018-10-10

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03701854. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.