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Exercise Conditioning in Elderly Patients With Heart Failure
The purpose of this study is : * To determine if aerobic exercise conditioning can improve symptoms, cardiovascular function and quality of life in elderly patients with congestive heart failure. * To describe the baseline clinical characteristics, cardiovascular function and neurohumoral function in elderly patients with congestive heart failure. * To determine the specific cardiovascular and noncardiovascular mechanisms by which symptoms and quality of life may improve following exercise conditioning in elderly patients with congestive heart failure.
In patients over age 65, cardiovascular disease accounts for the largest percentage of deaths, hospital days, doctor visits, and overall health care expenditures. In addition, heart failure is the most common discharge diagnosis in the elderly. Heart failure can be defined as a state in which cardiac output is insufficient to meet metabolic demands. This is most frequently manifested by symptoms of fatigue and dyspnea. Inherent in this definition is that symptoms may be increased or only occur during times when metabolic demand is increased, such as during exercise. As such, exercise intolerance is a hallmark of the heart failure syndrome. Exercise intolerance correlates not only with disease severity and also with subsequent mortality. Exercise tolerance can be objectively quantified during maximal symptom limited standardized exercise protocols by analysis of exercise time, workload, METS (metabolic equivalents), and oxygen consumption (V02)' These measures have appropriately become accepted as standards for functional assessment in this disorder as well as outcome measures following therapeutic interventions in HF. P.A.R.I.S. is a randomized, attention-controlled, single-blind trial of supervised aerobic exercise training in older patients with heart failure. The primary outcome is exercise capacity and the main secondary outcome is quality of life. Mechanistic outcomes were also examined. In PARIS, which focused on cardiac mechanisms, there were HFPEF and HFREF patients studied in parallel. In PARIS-II, there were only HFPEF patients which focused on vascular mechanisms. Main outcomes have been reported (see citations below).
Age
60 - No limit years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Wake Forest Baptist Health
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Start Date
July 1, 1993
Primary Completion Date
December 1, 2004
Completion Date
December 1, 2009
Last Updated
February 15, 2019
201
ACTUAL participants
Exercise
BEHAVIORAL
Control
BEHAVIORAL
Lead Sponsor
Wake Forest University
Collaborators
NCT07484009
NCT07191730
Data Source & Attribution
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