ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

Passive Limb Movement: A Tool to Assess Vascular Health and Guide Rehabilitation

Study Overview

This clinical trial focuses on testing the efficacy of different digital interventions to promote re-engagement in cancer-related long-term follow-up care for adolescent and young adult (AYA) survivors of childhood cancer.

Description

Brief Summary: Current U.S. Veteran demographics reveal an aging population with significant cardiovascular dysfunction. This ultimately manifests as mobility limitation, inactivity, and a subsequent worsening of cardiovascular disease (CVD) that often leads to death. However, despite this clear negative cycle of events, there is not a single clinically accepted, and therefore routinely utilized, method of assessing vascular health. As nitric oxide (NO) is anti-atherogenic and cardioprotective, identifying an in vivo bioassay of NO bioavailability has significant worth in this arena. Fueled predominantly by the VA Merit Award prior to this renewal application, single passive leg movement (sPLM) and the subsequent blood flow increase, measured non-invasively by ultrasound Doppler in the common femoral artery, is emerging as a method by which vascular endothelial function and therefore NO bioavailability can be determined. However, although this work has yielded an initial characterization of sPLM and established this method to be a novel, valid, and a clinically relevant approach to determine vascular health, further understanding of the sPLM response with advancing age and, ultimately, its implementation and assessment in both rehabilitation and clinical arenas is still necessary. With the growing interest in personalized medicine, the development of tools, such as sPLM, that allow individualized assessments to guide the physician, the patient, and the rehabilitative team, are essential. Therefore, two specific aims are proposed that will address the Central Hypothesis that the sPLM paradigm provides a clinically meaningful assessment of endothelial function. First, cardiac rehabilitation will be assessed by sPLM in the elderly, and, coupled with studies in the young, will elucidate the predominant pathways responsible for the change in endothelial function with aging and rehabilitation. Second, the CVD diagnostic value of the sPLM assessment of endothelial function will be evaluated relative to classic measures and markers of subclinical disease in order accelerate the inclusion of endothelial dysfunction as a CVD risk factor. The proposed studies aim to catalyze the transition of the assessment of endothelial function by sPLM from research to clinical practice.

Official Title

Passive Limb Movement: A Tool to Assess Vascular Health and Guide Rehabilitation

Quick Facts

Study Start:2015-09-01
Study Completion:2027-10-29
Study Type:Not specified
Phase:Not Applicable
Enrollment:Not specified
Status:ACTIVE_NOT_RECRUITING

Study ID

NCT03625349

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Ages Eligible for Study:18 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:ALL
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:Yes
Standard Ages:ADULT, OLDER_ADULT
Inclusion CriteriaExclusion Criteria
  1. * Young healthy subjects: No evidence of cardiovascular disease.
  2. * Patients undergoing angiography: Clinical referral for an angiography.
  1. * Young healthy subjects: Evidence of cardiovascular disease.
  2. * Patients undergoing angiography: Poor kidney function.

Contacts and Locations

Principal Investigator

Russell S. Richardson, PhD
PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT

Study Locations (Sites)

VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT
Salt Lake City, Utah, 84148-0001
United States

Collaborators and Investigators

Sponsor: VA Office of Research and Development

  • Russell S. Richardson, PhD, PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR, VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT

Study Record Dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Registration Dates

Study Start Date2015-09-01
Study Completion Date2027-10-29

Study Record Updates

Study Start Date2015-09-01
Study Completion Date2027-10-29

Terms related to this study

Additional Relevant MeSH Terms

  • Aging
  • Cardiovascular Disease