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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04546048

The Early Strength Training Program in Post-transplant Liver Cases

The Early Strength Training Exercise Therapy in Liver Recipients: Protocol for an Observational Feasibility Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
Memorial Hospital Groups · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Liver transplantation (LT) is a current life-saving procedure performed as an open-abdominal surgery for patients with end-stage liver diseases (ESLD). However, a high risk of post-surgical complications is relevant to major intra-abdominal interventions. In managing post-LT recovery, it is important to consider the extending pre-transplant physical status of ESLD patients concerning an impaired exercise capacity, a prolonged period of deconditioning, fatigue and muscle weakness, which leads to global motor impairment and decreased functional capacity. Sarcopenia and physical deconditioning are known as the hallmark features of ESLD. The quality and the quantity of skeletal muscle mass have been closely correlated with post-transplantation mortality in individuals undergoing LT. In addition to chronic deconditioning or myopathy related to chronic liver failure, post-transplant immunosuppressive medication contributes to increased risk for age-related decline in muscular strength and physical ability. It reportedly persists impaired physical function including reduced muscle strength, which have been consistently associated with impaired quality of life after a liver transplant. Exercise interventions in solid-organ recipients provide improvements in physical function including skeletal muscle strength. The literature has defined many types of exercise-based interventions including aerobic and resistive training or physical activity counselling in improving physical performance tasks, muscle strength and physical domain of quality of life in postoperative liver transplanted adults. Although there are studies in improving muscle performance and functional status, no study conducted in the post-transplant early period and an optimal exercise regimen for post-liver recipients. In the present study, it will be provided a framework for a possible change in practice aiming to improve muscle strength and functionality in liver recipients through a strength training exercise intervention at the early post-transplant period. The purposes of this trial were: 1) to evaluate the feasibility and safety of a strength exercise training program on functional mobility and quality of life of liver transplanted individuals and 2) to initiate physiotherapy protocols in this population. A key component of this approach was that it was individualized, providing one-to-one therapy with tailored progression specific to a person's individual mobility goals.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALStrength Exercise TrainingThe 8-week exercise-training program consisted of two 30-min sessions a day for 5 days/week and conducted by elastic exercise bands in 2-3 sets, 6-10 repetitions, with 1-2 min rest between sets (M. Deltoideus and M. Quadriceps are trained as major muscle groups). The 8-repetition maximum(8RM) is used to determine training loads with the rated perceived exertion(RPE) lower than 5-7 on the Modified Borg scale(MBS). The program consisted functional exercises by half squat to squat and sit-to-stand chair exercises. Exercise sessions were supervised twice daily during the 1st week, the 2nd week training included one supervised and one unsupervised daily sessions. The remaining 6-week training program conducted at home individually after discharge. Patients instructed for the ongoing 8-week training program and a patient-specific schedule delivered to subjects. Phone calls are provided weekly and training load is assessed while generating 4th week evaluations.

Timeline

Start date
2018-09-19
Primary completion
2019-08-24
Completion
2019-08-24
First posted
2020-09-11
Last updated
2020-11-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Turkey (Türkiye)

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04546048. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.