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Effects of Induced Inspiratory Muscle Fatigue on Functional Mobility of Older Adults

R

Riphah International University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Healthy Older Adults

Treatments

Other: Inspiratory muscle fatigue

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05812651
REC/01375 Qurat ul ain Gohar

Details and patient eligibility

About

The aim of study was to evaluate the effects of inspiratory induced muscle fatigue on functional mobility of older adults. Though, limited literature exists regarding inspiratory muscle fatigue and its consequences on functional activities of daily living and balance. Yet, it is not clear how improvement in inspiratory muscle strength is related with improvement in functional mobility.

Full description

Respiratory muscle fatigue was first described in 1977. Inspiratory muscle relaxation rates are known to slow following induction of fatigue. Inspiratory muscle fatigue was induced by threshold loading at 80 percent of (Maximum Inspiratory Pressure) Pimax until the subjects were unable to generate the target pressure. Inspiratory muscle fatigue (IMF) is proposed to negotiation exercise performance, probably via a respiratory muscle metaboreflex that impairs blood flow to working muscles, thereby accelerating the progress of fatigue in these muscles. Respiratory muscle fatigue revealed that a maximal inspiratory load of 50% could quickly fatigue both the inspiration and expiration muscles. Increased inspiratory muscle work may induce fatigue of the respiratory muscles, as well as of the non-respiratory muscles by central alterations at spinal and supraspinal level. Also there is an association between respiratory muscle dysfunction and physical performance in older adults. The abnormalities of respiratory movements may be dependable clinical signs of inspiratory muscle fatigue, mostly when accompanied by tachypnea and hypercapnia. Fatigue is distinguished from weakness, a decrease in force generation that is static and not reversible by rest, though muscle weakness may be a susceptibility to muscle fatigue. This study will contribute to determine the effects of respiratory muscle fatigue on balance and functional mobility with healthy older adults. To further understand this relationship, a battery of tests (considered as gold standard) will be performed after induced inspiratory muscles fatigue.

Enrollment

70 patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adults with age 60+ years
  • Both male and female participants
  • Patients with Forced Expiratory Volume 1/Forced Volume Capacity ratio greater than 80%

Exclusion criteria

  • Smokers
  • Subjects with a history of cardiovascular, respiratory, or neuromuscular
  • Diseases that can impede test or alter the maximum inspiratory pressure.
  • Subjects with cognitive impairment.
  • Subjects with low back and musculoskeletal disorders.
  • Previous experience in respiratory muscle training.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

70 participants in 1 patient group

IMF arm
Experimental group
Description:
The interventional protocol will include healthy older adults age above 60 years. At baseline - all measurements will be collected. After 3 days to one week, as per feasibility, participants will come to the lab again and perform inspiratory Muscle training according to the protocol that tends to induce inspiratory muscle fatigue. (60-80%MIP). Inspiratory resistive loading by starting at 60-80% (MIP) increasing every 10 minutes by 10% then measure Maximum Inspiratory Pressure (MIP), until MIP measurement decrease of more than 10% from baseline will be performed. When report a lower score of MIP and participants could no longer worked out, performed the functional mobility tests and see if there any variation. After the consent of participants an initial evaluation, Anthropometric measurements, Pulmonary function tests, PASE Questionnaire will be taken.
Treatment:
Other: Inspiratory muscle fatigue

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Suman Sheraz, PhD*

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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