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Not Yet RecruitingNCT06450119

The Effectiveness of a Dual-task Training Program

The Improvement of Cognition and Physical Function in Middle-aged and Older Adults With Cognitive Frailty: the Effectiveness of a Dual-task Training Program

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
196 (estimated)
Sponsor
Taipei Medical University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this study is to explore the effect of a dual-task training intervention on cognitive function,physical function, depression symptoms and quality of life in middle-aged and elderly people with cognitive impairment. A Randomized experimental research design is conduced to recruited 196 middle-aged and elderly people: potentially reversible or reversible cognitive decline to attend this study. All participants are randomly allocated into dual-task training, walking training alone, and cognitive training alone and the waiting list control group. The measurements include: demographic and disease data, frailty symptoms (The FRAIL Scale ,Time up and go test ,Sit-to-stand test), cognitive function (Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale Chinese version), depressive symptoms (Chinese version of Clinical Depression Symptom Assessment Scale) and life Quality (Taiwan's simplified version of the World Health Organization Quality of Life Questionnaire). The results of the study will use Generalized Liner Models and Pearson's product difference correlation analysis to confirm the impact of dual task training intervention on physical function, cognitive function, and depressive symptoms in middle-aged and elderly people with cognitive impairment effect on quality of life.

Detailed description

A Randomized experimental research design is conduced to recruited 196 middle-aged and elderly people: potentially reversible or reversible cognitive decline to attend this study. All participants are randomly allocated into dual-task training, walking training alone, and cognitive training alone and the waiting list control group. The dual task training group will receive 12 weeks of walking and cognitive training. The walking training alone group will receive 12 wees of walking training. The cognitive training alone group will receive 12 weeks of cognitive training. Each session is 60 minutes and twice a week. The waiting list control group will not receive intervention activities. Outcomes are measured both before and after the intervention. The measurements include: demographic and disease data, frailty symptoms (The FRAIL Scale ,Time up and go test ,Sit-to-stand test), cognitive function (Montreal Cognitive Assessment Scale Chinese version), depressive symptoms (Chinese version of Clinical Depression Symptom Assessment Scale) and life Quality (Taiwan's simplified version of the World Health Organization Quality of Life Questionnaire). The results of the study will use Generalized Liner Models and Pearson's product difference correlation analysis to confirm the impact of the dual task training intervention on physical function, cognitive function, and depressive symptoms in middle-aged and elderly people with cognitive impairment effect on quality of life.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERwalking trainingThe walking training alone group would receive walking training for 60 minutes twice weekly for twelve weeks.
OTHERcognition trainingThe cognition training alone group would receive cognition training for 60 minutes twice weekly for twelve weeks.

Timeline

Start date
2024-06-03
Primary completion
2024-06-03
Completion
2025-12-31
First posted
2024-06-10
Last updated
2024-06-10

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06450119. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.