Improving Mobility in Peripheral Artery Disease Using an Ankle Foot Orthosis
NCT ID: NCT02902211
Last Updated: 2024-08-20
Study Results
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View full resultsBasic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
50 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-07-07
2023-06-30
Brief Summary
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Data for evaluations will be collected from 50 participants with PAD. Fifty healthy age-matched controls will be participate in one baseline gait assessment for comparison purposes. Both groups between 40-85 years old.
Interventions and Evaluations Biomechanics evaluations: Patients with PAD will complete a biomechanics evaluation at baseline, following three months of control (standard of care), and following three months of AFO intervention. The evaluation will include measurement of walking distances, gait function, physical activity, quality of life, energy cost, muscle morphometrics, muscle activity, muscle oxygenation, and muscle strength and endurance while walking with and without the AFO. Healthy controls will be assessed during one baseline collection only and their participation in the study will then be finished.
Feasibility interview: All patients with PAD will participate in feasibility interviews that will assess acceptability, demand, implementation, and practicality. Interviews will occur 1.5 months and following completion of the AFO intervention (not the control arm).
AFO and Control (standard of care) Intervention: Patients will wear an off-the-shelf, carbon composite AFO that is adjusted to fit for three months. The patients will be asked to wear the AFO at all times except when they are in bed or showering/bathing. The instructions given to the patients about walking will be to follow the instructions from their doctor regarding risk factor management and exercise. The intervention order will be randomized and all subjects will participate in both arms.
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Detailed Description
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Hypothesis: An AFO improves walking performance in patients with PAD by reducing the energy cost of walking and these improvements can be seen from the first time the patient uses the AFO. Further, an AFO intervention improves walking performance by improving the muscular function of patients' affected legs.
Specific Aim 1: Test the hypothesis that from its first use an AFO produces improvements in walking performance of patients with PAD by decreasing the required muscle contribution and energy cost of walking.
Specific Aim 2: Test the hypothesis that using an AFO for three months leads to progressive improvements in walking performance, physical activity levels and quality of life of patients with PAD and that these improvements correlate with improvements in the morphometric measurements, oxygenation levels, and muscle strength and endurance characteristics of the affected legs. A crossover design will be used, in which half of subjects will complete a three--month control period before, and half after, the AFO intervention.
Specific Aim 3: To determine the feasibility of a three month AFO intervention by examining acceptability (satisfaction, intent to continue use), demand (actual use, perceived demand), implementation (degree of use, success or failure of use, factors affecting use), and practicality (effects, ability of participants to use AFO).
If the hypothesis is correct, the study will be the first to demonstrate that a simple, accessible AFO device can rapidly improve functional status and quality of life in patients with PAD immediately by decreasing the required muscular contribution and oxygen demands to PAD muscle. Additionally, Aim #2 will evaluate the long--term effects of wearing an AFO on functional status and quality of life. Aim #3 will help the investigative team ensure it is feasible to implement the AFO in our target population. Detailed measures of mechanisms related with walking performance, muscle contribution, physical activity, quality of life and how these mechanisms change after wearing the AFO for three months will provide the evidence required to implement an AFO therapy that will improve functional status and quality of life in individuals with PAD.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
TREATMENT
NONE
Study Groups
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Ankle foot orthosis
Patients will wear an off-the-shelf, carbon composite AFO that is adjusted for them for three months. The patients will be asked to wear the AFO at all times except when they are in bed or showering/bathing. The instructions given to the patients about walking will be to follow the instructions from their doctor regarding risk factor management and exercise.
Ankle foot orthosis
Patients will wear an ankle foot orthosis at all times except when he/she is sleeping or bathing for three months.
Control
Patients will be asked to follow the instructions from their doctor regarding risk factor management and exercise for three months.
Control/standard of care
Patients will carry out with typical activities suggested by their physician for three months.
Interventions
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Ankle foot orthosis
Patients will wear an ankle foot orthosis at all times except when he/she is sleeping or bathing for three months.
Control/standard of care
Patients will carry out with typical activities suggested by their physician for three months.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* demonstrate positive history of chronic claudication
* demonstrate exercise limiting claudication established by history and direct observation
* have an ankle/brachial index \< 0.90 at rest
* have a stable blood pressure regimen, stable lipid regimen, stable diabetes regimen and risk factor control for 6 weeks.
Exclusion Criteria
* acute lower extremity ischemic event secondary to thromboembolic disease or acute trauma
* walking capacity limited by conditions other than claudication including leg (joint/musculoskeletal, neurologic) and systemic (heart, lung disease) pathology
40 Years
85 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Nebraska
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Sara A Myers, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Nebraska
Locations
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Omaha VA Medical Center
Omaha, Nebraska, United States
University of Nebraska Medical Center
Omaha, Nebraska, United States
Countries
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References
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Bashir AZ, Dinkel DM, Pipinos II, Estabrooks PA, Johanning JM, Myers SA. Long-term use of an ankle-foot orthosis intervention in patients with peripheral artery disease using the integrated promoting action on research implementation in health services (i-PARIHS) framework. Int J Cardiol. 2023 Feb 1;372:23-32. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2022.11.041. Epub 2022 Nov 29.
Provided Documents
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Document Type: Study Protocol and Statistical Analysis Plan
Document Type: Informed Consent Form
Other Identifiers
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0485-16-FB
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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