Exercise for Chronic Kidney Diseases

NCT ID: NCT04522115

Last Updated: 2020-08-25

Study Results

Results pending

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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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

60 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2020-01-05

Study Completion Date

2020-06-03

Brief Summary

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PURPOSE: To compare between the effect of aerobic exercise and resistance exercises on patients with obese chronic kidney diseases.

BACKGROUND: excessive adiposity is well recognized as an amplifier for the risk of renal disease progression in patients with chronic kidney diseases of various aetiology. Renal alterations induced by obesity include hyperfiltration, pathological proteinuria/ albuminuria and reduced glomerular filtration rate HYPOTHESES: There will not significantly effect of neither aerobic nor resistance on obesity, in patient with chronic kidney disease.

RESEARCH QUESTION: Aerobic exercise and resistance exercise which of them has significant effect on obesity in patient with chronic kidney disease?

Detailed Description

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Questions: Does exercise improve physical performance, activity, and quality of life in obese diabetic patients with chronic kidney disease? Design: Randomized controlled trial with concealed allocation, intention-to-treat analysis, and blinded assessment.

Participants: Sixty people aged between 35and 60 years were admitted to a department of Internal medicine .Cairo University hospitals divided randomly into two Groups Intervention: group 1 received aerobic exercises. Patients exercise at 40 to 60% of maximum heart rate. The exercise period comprised the following: the warming up phase (3-5 min), which included aerobic movement exercise of range of motion joints: rotating the wrist (20 rpm clockwise and 20 rpm counter clockwise), wrist up and down (up to 20 moves on the forearm), ankle twisting motion (40 rotations clockwise and counterclockwise around the ankles), and ankles up and down (20 times); the actual phase (20-30 min), which included cycle ergo meter exercise with 12-13 rated perceived exertion; and finally the cooling down phase (3-5 min) in the form of the same aerobic movements as performed in the warming up phase. Exercises done three times per week for three months and group 2 received resistance exercises.training of the lower extremities was performed three times per week for three months. Starting weights for knee extension and hip abduction and flexion were determined from a three-repetition maximum repetition maximum(RM) using ankle weights that can be adjusted in 1 lb. increments. A RM is the maximum weight that can be lifted three times with proper technique. Training started at approximately 60% of 3 RM for two sets of 10 repetitions and was increased to three sets as tolerated. When patients could perform three sets with correct technique, the weight was increased. In addition to knee extension and hip flexion and abduction, ankle dorsiflexion and plantar flexion were performed during each exercise session Outcome measures: physical activity was measured via timed up and go test, sit to stand test, number of sit-to-stand-to-sit cycles in 60 seconds, 6 minutes walking test. Obesity was measured by BMI, waist circumference and waist to hip ratio. Also Blood pressure (systolic/diastolic blood pressures, Mean blood pressure, heart rate and blood glucose were measured before exercise. The perception of exercise intensity was assessed by Original Borg Scale. All measurements were taken at the beginning and after three months of treatment.

Conditions

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Chronic Kidney Failure

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

group 1 received aerobic exercises and group 2 received resistance exercises.
Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

SINGLE

Participants

Study Groups

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aerobic training

Each exercise training session included 3 to 5 minutes of warm-up, range-of-motion exercises, interval training(aerobic training), cool-down, and post-exercise range-of-motion exercises. Patients exercise at 40 to 60% of maximum heart rate.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

exercises

Intervention Type OTHER

Group(1) aerobic training: Each exercise training session included 3 to 5 minutes of warm-up, range-of-motion exercises, interval training(aerobic training), cool-down, and post-exercise range-of-motion exercises. Patients exercise at 40 to 60% of maximum heart rate.

Group(2) resistance exercise: training of the lower extremities was performed three times per week. Starting weights for knee extension and hip abduction and flexion were determined from a three-repetition maximum (3RM) using ankle weights that can be adjusted in 1 lb. increments. A 3RM is the maximum weight that can be lifted three times with proper technique. Training started at approximately 60% of 3RM for two sets of 10 repetitions and was increased to three sets as tolerated.

Resistance training

Resistance exercise training of the lower extremities was performed three times per week. Starting weights for knee extension and hip abduction and flexion were determined from a three-repetition maximum (3RM) using ankle weights that can be adjusted in 1 lb. increments. A 3RM is the maximum weight that can be lifted three times with proper technique. Training started at approximately 60% of 3RM for two sets of 10 repetitions and was increased to three sets as tolerated.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

exercises

Intervention Type OTHER

Group(1) aerobic training: Each exercise training session included 3 to 5 minutes of warm-up, range-of-motion exercises, interval training(aerobic training), cool-down, and post-exercise range-of-motion exercises. Patients exercise at 40 to 60% of maximum heart rate.

Group(2) resistance exercise: training of the lower extremities was performed three times per week. Starting weights for knee extension and hip abduction and flexion were determined from a three-repetition maximum (3RM) using ankle weights that can be adjusted in 1 lb. increments. A 3RM is the maximum weight that can be lifted three times with proper technique. Training started at approximately 60% of 3RM for two sets of 10 repetitions and was increased to three sets as tolerated.

Interventions

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exercises

Group(1) aerobic training: Each exercise training session included 3 to 5 minutes of warm-up, range-of-motion exercises, interval training(aerobic training), cool-down, and post-exercise range-of-motion exercises. Patients exercise at 40 to 60% of maximum heart rate.

Group(2) resistance exercise: training of the lower extremities was performed three times per week. Starting weights for knee extension and hip abduction and flexion were determined from a three-repetition maximum (3RM) using ankle weights that can be adjusted in 1 lb. increments. A 3RM is the maximum weight that can be lifted three times with proper technique. Training started at approximately 60% of 3RM for two sets of 10 repetitions and was increased to three sets as tolerated.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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resistance exercises

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Chronic kidney disease Stages 2-4
* body mass index ≥30
* Diabetes mellitus

Exclusion Criteria

* Uncontrolled hypertension
* Uncontrolled diabetes mellitus.
* Cardiac failure
* Motor disorders
* Dementia
Minimum Eligible Age

35 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

60 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Cairo University

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Manal k. youssef

Assistant professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Manal K Youssef, phD

Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Cairo University

Locations

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Cairo University

Cairo, , Egypt

Site Status

Countries

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Egypt

Provided Documents

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Document Type: Study Protocol and Informed Consent Form

View Document

Document Type: Statistical Analysis Plan

View Document

Other Identifiers

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P.T. REC/012/002608

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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