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The goal of this clinical trial is to figure out if 8 weeks of walking exercise before bariatric surgery improves risk factors for diabetes and other markers of health. This is important as it may help reduce complications after surgery, improve health markers and increase physical activity levels after surgery (which is an important marker of maintaining bariatric weight loss). The main question that this study is trying to answer is whether walking improves a risk factor for type 2 diabetes called insulin sensitivity (how well your body is able to use glucose).
Adults planning to have bariatric surgery will be recruited from the Charlottesville VA area. Before they have their surgery, participants will be randomly assigned (like flipping a coin) to a group that participates in 8 weeks of walking on a treadmill (2-3 times a week) or a group that does their normal care before bariatric surgery.
Researchers will compare the effects of walking before bariatric surgery on:
Full description
The purpose of the present study is to evaluate the impact of 8 weeks of supervised aerobic exercise prior to bariatric surgery on insulin sensitivity using the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp. Participants will be recruited from the area surrounding the UVA hospital, while the primary outcome will be insulin sensitivity as measured by the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp procedure and secondary outcomes include the effects of the exercise intervention on surgical outcomes and cardiometabolic and arterial health in bariatric patients.
Objectives:
Primary Objective: To investigate the effects of exercise + standard care and standard care only in obese individuals prior to bariatric surgery on insulin sensitivity after bariatric surgery.
Secondary Objectives: To examine the effects of exercise + standard care and standard care only in obese individuals prior to bariatric surgery on surgical outcomes, such as length of stay post-surgery, and other clinically relevant outcomes, such as cardiometabolic and arterial health, in adults following bariatric surgery.
Hypotheses:
Primary Hypothesis: An 8-week exercise intervention before bariatric surgery will improve insulin sensitivity as measured by the hyperinsulinemic-euglycemic clamp following bariatric surgery.
Secondary Hypothesis: An 8-week exercise intervention will improve clinically relevant post-surgical outcomes, such as surgical outcomes, quality of life, arterial health, and other cardiometabolic factors following bariatric surgery.
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0 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Emily Grammer; Damon L Swift
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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