The Acute and Chronic Effects of a Heel Raise Programme on Central Blood Pressure, Arterial Compliance and Oxygen Perfusion After Stroke
NCT ID: NCT03423433
Last Updated: 2020-01-18
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
15 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2018-06-01
2019-05-01
Brief Summary
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Thirty participants will be recruited to this study. All will take part in four sessions. One familiarisation session will acclimatise participants to the equipment used involving central and peripheral blood pressures, pulse wave velocity, arterial stiffness, maximal voluntary contractions of the medial gastrocnemius and Stroop tasks.. Two experimental sessions will take place involving extended sedentary time (one involving uninterrupted sedentary time and one including ten heel raises every ten minutes). A control condition of 15 participants will then be tested ten weeks post-. The experimental condition of 15 participants will undergo a ten-week heel raise prescribed programme before having peripheral and central blood pressure, pulse wave velocity, arterial stiffness, peripheral and cerebral oxygen perfusion, cognitive performance and maximal voluntary contraction of the medial gastrocnemius assessed after their programme.
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Detailed Description
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Prolonged seated time may also lead to reduced cerebral and peripheral oxygen perfusion. Heel raises may have the potential to improve these parameters without being too physically demanding on a clinical population. This study will investigate whether prescribed heel raises can have an acute and/or chronic effect on peripheral and central blood pressures, measures of central systolic loading, peripheral and cerebral oxygen perfusion and cognitive performance.
This study will recruit thirty chronic stroke sufferers from a local stroke groups. Visit will take place in the morning in a fasted state.
In the first visit, participants will undertake five stroop familiarisation tests. Stroop tests allow assessment of cognitive function. Demographic measures will be taken and baseline pulse wave analysis (PWA \[SphygmoCor XCEL\]) and pulse wave velocity (PWV) measures will be recorded. Heel raises will be demonstrated to the participants and displayed in a diagram. Participants will practice this movement before maximum voluntary contractions (MVC) will be measured using electromyography.
On each of the second two visits, participants will rest in a seated position for 20 minutes before having PWA, PWV and near infra-red spectroscopy (NIRS) measured at baseline to provide both peripheral and central blood pressures, arterial stiffness, cerebral and peripheral oxygen perfusion. Participants will then either undergo a 180 minute seated protocol or a 180 minute calf raising protocol (10 calf raises per 10 minutes) After 10, 30, 60, 90, 120, 150 and 170 minutes in both protocols, PWA, PWV and Stroop test results will be recorded. EMG will record muscle activation of the affected medial gastrocnemius during heel raises after each 30 minutes. NIRS will continuously record throughout the data collection process. Participants will watch a calming TV show (e.g. a David Attenborough documentary) to pass time without raising blood pressure. Statistical analysis will determine whether the heel raises caused acute alterations in peripheral and central blood pressures, pulse wave velocity, cerebral and peripheral blood flow, muscle activation and cognitive performance.
The control condition of fifteen participants will then return after ten weeks and undertake a duplicate of session 1. An experimental condition of fifteen participants will undertake a ten week programme involving prescribed heel raises every day. They will then return after ten weeks and receive an identical session to their first session, allowing the chronic effect of prescribed heel raises to be observed.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
NONE
Study Groups
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Control condition
This condition will recruit fifteen chronic stroke sufferers. In the first visit, participants will undertake five Stroop familiarisation tests alongside baseline pulse wave analysis (PWA) and pulse wave velocity (PWV). Participants will practice this movement before maximum voluntary contractions (MVC) will be measured using electromyography.
During the second two visits, participants will have either undergo a 180 minute seated protocol or a 180 minute heel raising protocol (10 heel raises per 10 minutes) After 10, 30, 90, 120, 150 and 180 minutes in both protocols, PWA, PWV and Stroop task results will be recorded. NIRS will measure peripheral and cerebral oxygen perfusion throughout the 180 minutes. EMG will record muscle activation during heel raises after each 30 minutes.
Ten weeks after these sessions have been completed, participants will return to the laboratory for follow-up a session assessing resting measures in an identical protocol to the first visit.
No interventions assigned to this group
Experimental (heel raise) condition
This condition will recruit fifteen chronic stroke sufferers. In the first visit, participants will undertake five Stroop familiarisation tests alongside baseline pulse wave analysis (PWA) and pulse wave velocity (PWV). Participants will practice this movement before maximum voluntary contractions (MVC) will be measured using electromyography. During the second two visits, participants will have undergo a 180 minute seated or a 180 minute heel raise protocol (10 heel raises per 10 minutes) After 10, 30, 90, 120, 150 and 180 minutes, PWA, PWV and Stroop task results will be recorded. NIRS will measure peripheral and cerebral oxygen perfusion throughout. EMG will record muscle activation during heel raises after each 30 minutes.
Participants in this arm will be prescribed a ten-week heel-raise programme involving hourly heel raises. Ten weeks later, participants will return to the laboratory for follow-up sessions assessing resting measures in an identical protocol to the first visit.
Heel raise intervention
A daily heel-raise programme for ten weeks to determine any chronic effects of heel raises on the previously mentioned variables.
Interventions
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Heel raise intervention
A daily heel-raise programme for ten weeks to determine any chronic effects of heel raises on the previously mentioned variables.
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Physically capable of heel raise motion
Exclusion Criteria
* Inability to perform heel raise motion
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Winchester
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Locations
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University of Winchester
Winchester, Hampshire, United Kingdom
Countries
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Other Identifiers
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RKE_2017_002
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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