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Foot Core Exercise Program on Balance Control and Walking in Aged Sarcopenia

B

Buddhist Tzu Chi General Hospital

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Balance Control
Walking, Difficulty
Muscle Weakness
Sarcopenia

Treatments

Behavioral: regular exercises for the elderly
Behavioral: integrated exercise therapy with 3D printing exerciser for training intrinsic foot muscles

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05750888
P00001837

Details and patient eligibility

About

In modern society with an increasing aging population, recent literature has defined sarcopenia as a significant reduced mass and function of skeletal muscle with physical limitations due to aging. Clinically and experimentally, the foot often plays a crucial role in sensorimotor control and movement performance in standing, walking, and running. Apparently, previous literature has shown that the intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles have significantly reduced muscle morphology and muscle strength in the elderly compared to that of young healthy controls. How to effectively increase foot muscles using muscle-strengthening exercises will be a crucial issue for further research and clinical intervention in this population.

The intrinsic foot muscles (IFM) are the primary local stabilizer to provide static and dynamic stability in the foot, which are part of the active and neural subsystems to constitute the foot core system. The intrinsic foot muscles (IFMs) may play a key role in supporting foot arches (e.g., the medial longitudinal arch, MLA), providing flexibility, stability, shock absorption to the foot, and partially controlling foot pronation. Due to the difficulties in teaching and learning the plantar intrinsic foot muscle (IFM) exercise, the accuracy and follow-up after learning this exercise could be questioned following this exercise program. Physiologically, the effects of integrated exercise intervention may be achieved following more than 4-week intensive exercise intervention at least. How to learn and activate this kind of exercise efficiently and effectively is a key issue for employing these exercise interventions in the elderly with and without sarcopenia.

In this project, we will aim to employ the novel intrinsic foot muscle strengthening device using 3-D printing techniques and to examine the feasibility and reliability of the morphology in intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles and foot posture before and after exercise intervention using sonographic imaging and foot posture index in the elderly with and without sarcopenia; second, we will investigate whether the immediate and persistent increase in balance control and level-walking after this therapeutic exercise with novel 3-D printing foot core exerciser.

Full description

In modern society with an increasing aging population, Asian Working Groups for Sarcopenia (AWSG) has defined sarcopenia as a significantly reduced mass and function of skeletal muscle with physical limitations due to aging. The prevalence in the globe has reported 5% - 25.7% of the elderly population and its associations are very high between daily activity limitations, physical limitations, and premature death. Clinically and experimentally, the foot often plays a crucial role in sensorimotor control and movement performance in standing, walking, and running. Apparently, previous literature has shown that the intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles have significantly reduced muscle morphology and muscle strength in the elderly compared to that of young healthy controls. How to effectively increase foot muscles using muscle-strengthening exercises will be a crucial issue for further research and clinical intervention in this population.

Anatomically, the intrinsic foot muscles (IFM) are the primary local stabilizer to provide static and dynamic stability in the foot, which are part of the active and neural subsystems to constitute the foot core system. The intrinsic foot muscles (IFMs) may play a key role in supporting foot arches (e.g. the medial longitudinal arch, MLA), providing flexibility, stability, shock absorption to the foot, and partially controlling foot pronation. Due to the difficulties in teaching and learning the plantar intrinsic foot muscle (IFM) exercise, the accuracy and follow-up after learning this exercise could be questioned following this exercise program; Physiologically, the effects of integrated exercise intervention may be achieved following more than 4-week intensive exercise intervention at least. How to learn and activate this kind of exercise efficiently and effectively is a key issue for employing these exercise interventions in the elderly with and without sarcopenia.

This project consists of two main parts - first, we will aim to employ the novel intrinsic foot muscle strengthening device using 3-D printing techniques and to examine the feasibility and reliability of the morphology in intrinsic and extrinsic foot muscles and foot posture before and after exercise intervention using sonographic imaging and foot posture index in the elderly with and without sarcopenia; second, we will investigate whether the immediate and persistent increase in balance control and level-walking after this therapeutic exercise with novel 3-D printing foot core exerciser. More importantly, we elucidate important clinical evidence-based information of long-term novel therapeutic exercise intervention for clinicians and health policymakers.

Enrollment

60 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

65 to 95 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • the elderly with sarcopenia [1, 2] Age is more than 65 years with a medical diagnosis of sarcopenia Be able to independently stand and walk To meet the criteria of the definition of sarcopenia in the AWGS 2019 consensus update on sarcopenia diagnosis and treatment Be able to understand independently the participation consent in this research project
  • Healthy elder individuals A neutral foot alignment: determined by measurement of the resting calcaneal stance position (RCSP: between 2˚of inversion and 2˚of eversion) and scores on the navicular drop (ND: between 5 and 9 mm) test.

Foot Posture Index (FPI) Score is between 0 and 5. No pain in the lower limbs No history of lower limb injury that has affected function or caused the individual to seek previous medical or therapeutic intervention within 6 months

Exclusion criteria

  • All groups not be able to sign the consent form for the participation Traumatic injury to lower limbs which impacted joint integrity and function (i.e., fractures) resulting in at least 1 interrupted day of desired physical activity Major neurological, cardiorespiratory, or circulatory disorders contribute to not being able to independently stand and walk.

Recent intervention/management within the last 6 months

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Quadruple Blind

60 participants in 3 patient groups

Experimental group 1
Experimental group
Description:
A novel-designed intrinsic foot muscle-strengthening exerciser using 3D printing techniques will be used in the experimental group.
Treatment:
Behavioral: integrated exercise therapy with 3D printing exerciser for training intrinsic foot muscles
Experimental group 2
Sham Comparator group
Description:
A regular exercise program will be provided in this group.
Treatment:
Behavioral: regular exercises for the elderly
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
There is no exercise or other intervention in this group.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ya-Huei Su, BSc; Chich-Haung R Yang, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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