Trials / Unknown
UnknownNCT06033417
Walking and Blood Pressure in Older Adults With Respiratory Impairment.
The Effect of an 8-week Walking Intervention on Blood Pressure in Older Adults With Respiratory Impairment: A Pilot Study.
- Status
- Unknown
- Phase
- N/A
- Study type
- Interventional
- Enrollment
- 30 (estimated)
- Sponsor
- Iowa State University · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 65 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Not accepted
Summary
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effect of an 8-week walking program on blood pressure in inactive older adults with respiratory impairment, a condition where lung function is sub-optimal for a person's age. Older adults with respiratory impairment have greater risks of death by cardiovascular disease (CVD) compared to those without respiratory impairment, and this may be partly driven by higher resting blood pressure. One way to lower blood pressure is to increase the number of daily steps achieved throughout the course of everyday life ('lifestyle steps'), and previous research shows that an additional 3,000 lifestyle steps/day is effective for achieving this. However, whether an increase in daily lifestyle steps is effective for reducing blood pressure in senior-community dwelling older adults with respiratory impairment is unknown. Understanding how increasing daily steps impacts blood pressure in this understudied population is important for informing future strategies for tackling cardiovascular disease risk in those with lung dysfunction.
Detailed description
Older adults are particularly susceptible to respiratory impairment (a condition of lung dysfunction) due in part to longer lifetime exposures to air pollutants, tobacco smoke, and physical inactivity. Older adults with respiratory impairment have greater long-term risks of death by cardiovascular disease (CVD) when compared to individuals without respiratory impairment. Impaired lung function tends to run parallel with high blood pressure, and high blood pressure is a determinant of CVD mortality in this population. One approach to lowering blood pressure across the lifespan is by increasing physical activity (PA) behavior. Walking is the most commonly practiced modality of PA in older adulthood, and previous studies show that accumulating an additional 3,000 steps/day over 5-days a week through activities of daily living (i.e., 'lifestyle stepping') reduces blood pressure in inactive older adults free from respiratory impairment. This step-based PA prescription roughly equates to 150-minutes of moderate-intensity aerobic PA/week for most inactive older adults, and therefore satisfies the minimum aerobic PA recommendations for substantial health benefits. However, the impact of such an intervention on blood pressure in older adults with respiratory impairment is unclear. The 'Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans: Midcourse Report' (2023) indicates that senior centers are key settings for successful PA interventions. Senior-living communities are traditionally well-designed and well-resourced to support PA (e.g., safe outdoor walking spaces; access to indoor exercise facilities; social support, etc.), making them highly suitable locations for lifestyle walking. Additionally, the prescription of PA using lifestyle step counts rather than time-based prescriptions is intuitive and arguably easier to integrate into activities of daily living. However, no study has yet evaluated the effect of increasing daily lifestyle step counts on blood pressure in older adults with respiratory impairment. Addressing this gap in knowledge will provide support for the utility of lifestyle walking as a therapeutic approach to CVD risk management in older adults with lung dysfunction.
Conditions
Interventions
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| OTHER | Increased lifestyle walking (intervention) | Participants will increase their baseline steps by a minimum of 3,000 extra steps/day, 5-days/week, for 8-weeks. Baseline steps will be assessed using a pedometer over a 7-day period before the intervention, after which a new (higher) daily step target will be assigned. The intervention will take place in the free-living setting, with participants reaching their step goals by engaging in more activities of daily living or via purposeful physical activity. Participants will wear a pedometer throughout the 8-week period to keep track of their steps, and adherence to the protocol will be determined by collecting the stored step data directly from each participant's pedometer on a weekly basis. Participants will be supported in their efforts to meet their daily step targets by engaging in once-weekly walking groups (30-mins/session) led by research staff. They will also receive 20-minute phone calls once every two weeks to set goals and create action plans for reaching their step targets. |
| OTHER | Health education only (control) | Those randomized to the delayed participation group will be instructed to maintain their 'normal' lifestyle activities, thereby avoiding any significant increase in daily step counts beyond their 'baseline' values. Participants will wear a pedometer throughout the 8-week period to keep track of their steps, and adherence to the protocol will be determined by collecting the stored step data directly from each participant's pedometer on a weekly basis. Participants in this group will attend once-weekly group health education sessions (30-minutes/session), in addition to 5-minute, 'touch base' phone calls once every 2-weeks, but these phone calls will not involve goal-setting or action planning. After completing the initial 8-week period, these individuals can then opt to undertake the 'increased lifestyle walking' intervention of 3,000 extra steps/day over 5-days for 8-weeks if desired. |
Timeline
- Start date
- 2023-09-01
- Primary completion
- 2024-01-01
- Completion
- 2024-05-01
- First posted
- 2023-09-13
- Last updated
- 2023-09-13
Locations
1 site across 1 country: United States
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06033417. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.