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Eccentric Exercise Training as Novel Rehabilitation for Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)

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McGill University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive
Emphysema
Bronchitis, Chronic

Treatments

Other: Eccentric exercise training

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01077102
MUHC Pilot Project 2007

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main purpose of this project is to establish the additional value of eccentric versus concentric exercise to optimize muscle function in patients with severe COPD. With this pilot project the investigators expect that an eccentric endurance training protocol adapted to severe COPD patients will lead to gains in muscle strength, the primary outcome, and cellular adaptation (muscle morphology and oxidative capacity, mitochondrial respiratory capacity) when compared to a concentric training approach.

This information will be essential if the investigators want to design and power a randomized clinical trial that will allow assessing effectiveness of this novel rehabilitation approach.

Full description

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a major respiratory illness that is both preventable and treatable. Dyspnea is the most important symptom that COPD patients experience and this can have a major impact on their daily live. While COPD is characterized by a spectrum of disease severity, most patients experience poor exercise intolerance attributable to ventilatory limitation as well as peripheral muscle fatigue, ultimately leading to severe disability.

Endurance exercise is an important component of pulmonary rehabilitation and is aimed at preventing this decline in functional capacity. The effects of pulmonary rehabilitation are largely attributable to the exercise training component involving concentric muscle contractions, traditionally trough dynamic, large muscle exercise on a cycle ergometer or treadmill. However, many patients are unable to partake and benefit from such rehabilitation because of locomotor muscle weakness and severe ventilatory limitation that prevent them from exercising at intensities sufficient to provoke improvements in cardioventilatory and skeletal muscle function. Eccentric exercise is known for its unique physiologically fundamental characteristics: the lower metabolic demand for a same power output and greater muscle gains compared to the concentric exercise. For this reason, eccentric endurance training has been proposed as a novel adjunctive rehabilitative countermeasure for certain chronic diseases (such as coronary disease and COPD) and can play an important role for patients with advanced disease.

Enrollment

24 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

40 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • male patients with severe COPD (FEV1/FVC < 0.70 and FEV1 ≤ 50% predicted of normal)
  • Patients aged 40 to 80 years old in whom exercise is not contraindicated
  • Current and ex-smokers
  • Patients who do not require oxygen therapy

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients presenting neurological or orthopedic problems, morbid obesity, acute medical condition or recent exacerbations (in the last four weeks)
  • Patients with recent or current participation in a rehabilitation program

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

24 participants in 2 patient groups

Eccentric exercise training
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: Eccentric exercise training
Concentric exercise training
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Other: Eccentric exercise training

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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