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The Shape Regulation Mechanism of Yam Pill on Patients With Sarcopenia Based on Intestine-muscle-brain Axis

F

Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Sarcopenia

Treatments

Dietary Supplement: Yam pill

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05919368
KFKT-2022-012

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main manifestation of sarcopenia is the decline of muscle strength, quality, and physical function, and it has the characteristics of overlapping, changing, or transforming with cognitive and emotional problems, belonging to the category of physical and mental diseases. At present, the effective treatment and mechanism of the disease are still unclear. The team's preliminary study found that the Jingfang Yam pill has unique advantages in "spleen dominates muscle", which can significantly improve the skeletal muscle mass, strength, and endurance of mice. The intestine-muscle-brain axis-spleen deficiency may be the key pathogenesis of sarcopenia. As such, the study proposes a hypothesis: whether Yam pills intervene in patients with sarcopenia is achieved bidirectional balance regulation of the body through the bidirectional communication pathway of the muscle-brain axis regulated by the intestinal flora. This project applies a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind RCT study design, with sarcopenia patients as the research objects, and utilizes musculoskeletal ultrasound, gut microbiota, untargeted metabolomics, functional near-infrared imaging, and other multidisciplinary techniques. To explore the mechanism of Yam pill regulating patients with sarcopenia by regulating intestinal microecology and metabolism-related molecules mediated by the "intestine-muscle-brain axis".

Full description

This randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study intends to recruit 136 qualified sarcopenias with spleen-asthenia syndrome. The trial will be conducted at the Second People's Hospital Affiliated to Fujian University of Traditional Chinese Medicine in Fujian Province, China. All subjects will be required to fill in baseline information before enrollment to determine the general situation of patients before randomization. Subsequently, the subjects were randomly divided into two groups in a 1:1 ratio: the yam pill group (n = 68) and the placebo group (n =68), randomized sequences were provided by statistical experts who were not involved throughout the trial. Among them, the yam pill is a traditional Chinese medicine formula pill composed of yam, white art, and ginseng, and the placebo is mainly composed of corn starch, which is entirely consistent with the appearance, shape, size, color, specification, packaging and label of yam pill. The Chinese medicine formulations of the two groups were provided in the form of a pill and rice soup delivery (3 times a day, 5 days/week, a total of 24 weeks). In addition, to improve patient compliance during the intervention period, patients in both groups were required to attend a health education lecture once a month, and both groups were followed up for 24 weeks after the intervention.

The four-time points were compared before the intervention (0 weeks), during the intervention (after the end of the 12th week), at the end of the intervention (after the end of the 24th week), and during the follow-up (after the end of the 48th week). The main index was the changes in muscle mass ( 24 weeks minus baseline), and the secondary index was the changes in muscle strength (grip strength; 5 times chair stand test); Physical function (e.g. 6-min walking test, gait speed, time-up-go-test); cognitive function, quality of life and clinical efficacy of traditional Chinese medicine were investigated with the forms of questionnaires to explore the clinical effectiveness of yam pills on patients with spleen asthenia syndrome. Secondly, near-infrared spectral imaging (fNIRS) was used to explore whether the improvement of clinical efficacy caused by yam pills after 24 weeks of intervention was related to the hemodynamic changes in the prefrontal cortex and motor cortex brain region based on the dual task of motor cognition. Subsequently, 16S-rRNA sequencing and non-targeted metabolomics were used to explore whether the improvement of clinical efficacy caused by Yam pills after 24 weeks of intervention was related to the regulation of intestinal flora and its metabolites, to finally clarify the musculus-brain crosstalk during the intervention process and explore its potential mechanism of action.

Enrollment

136 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

60 to 85 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Age ≥60 years old, in line with the AWGS diagnostic criteria for sarcopenia, and in line with the TCM dialectical standard of spleen deficiency syndrome;
  2. Be able to understand and cooperate with the test, and voluntarily sign the informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Motor dysfunction caused by severe nervous system diseases, musculoskeletal system diseases osteoporosis, severe osteoarthritis;
  2. severe heart, lung or mental illness, uncontrolled endocrine or metabolic disease, or severe liver or kidney function (such as cirrhosis, a history of kidney stones, kidney failure or dialysis);
  3. Inability to communicate properly with the researcher due to speech or uncorrected hearing impairment;
  4. Severe cognitive impairment (brief mental state examination: MMSE score < 24 points), unable to understand the content included in the questionnaire and scale;
  5. Use of growth hormone, estrogen, progesterone or testosterone supplements for nearly 3 months, or severe nutritional deficiencies;
  6. Participate in other trials or Chinese medicine supplement trials in the past three months.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

136 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Yam pill
Experimental group
Description:
It consists of sweet potato, white art and ginseng
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Yam pill
placebo group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
It consists of corn starch and dextrin
Treatment:
Dietary Supplement: Yam pill

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Ruihan RH Wan; Lidian LD Chen

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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