NCT05967780

Brief Summary

Comparison of open heart surgery patients with forward head posture with and without perioperative therapeutic exercise on craniovertebral angle, pulmonary function, balance and quality of life

Trial Health

87
On Track

Trial Health Score

Automated assessment based on enrollment pace, timeline, and geographic reach

Enrollment
48

participants targeted

Target at P25-P50 for not_applicable

Timeline
Completed

Started Aug 2023

Shorter than P25 for not_applicable

Geographic Reach
1 country

1 active site

Status
completed

Health score is calculated from publicly available data and should be used for screening purposes only.

Trial Relationships

Click on a node to explore related trials.

Study Timeline

Key milestones and dates

First Submitted

Initial submission to the registry

July 4, 2023

Completed
28 days until next milestone

First Posted

Study publicly available on registry

August 1, 2023

Completed
16 days until next milestone

Study Start

First participant enrolled

August 17, 2023

Completed
5 months until next milestone

Primary Completion

Last participant's last visit for primary outcome

December 31, 2023

Completed
Same day until next milestone

Study Completion

Last participant's last visit for all outcomes

December 31, 2023

Completed
Last Updated

February 28, 2024

Status Verified

February 1, 2024

Enrollment Period

5 months

First QC Date

July 4, 2023

Last Update Submit

February 27, 2024

Conditions

Keywords

BalanceCraniovertebral angleForward head postureOpen heart surgeryPulmonary functionQuality of lifeStrengtheningStretching

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcomes (14)

  • Craniovertebral angle

    For measuring the angle, the reflective markers will be placed on the tragus of the ear and spinous process of the C7. The participant will be asked to stand and maintain her usual upright posture with her arms resting at the sides, and looking straight ahead. The photos will be captured by a digital camera. The camera will be positioned on a tripod 50 cm away from the participant. The axis of the lens of the camera will be placed orthogonal to the sagittal plane of the participant at the level of the shoulder. The photos will be taken repeatedly so that the participant was not exactly aware of the actual time of photography. The craniovertebral angle will be calculated by image. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Forced Vital Capacity (FVC)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Forced Expired Volume in one second (FEV1)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Forced Expired Volume in one second/Forced Vital Capacity (FEV1/FVC) ratio

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Peak expiratory flow (PEF)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • 25% of the Force Expiratory Flow (FEF25)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • 75% of the Force Expiratory Flow (FEF75)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Average flow between 25% and 75% of the Force Expiratory Flow (FEF25-75)

    Spirometry is the term for basic lung function tests that measure the amount of air exhaled and inhaled. There are three basic related measurements: volume, time, and flow. Spirometry is objective, non-invasive, sensitive to early changes and reproducible. With the availability of portable measuring devices, it can be performed almost anywhere and by anyone with the right training. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Standing balance

    The Single Leg Stance Test (SLST) is used to assess static balance performance which requires the participant to stand barefoot on their right or left leg (donor's leg) and hold the contralateral leg in approximately 45 degrees of hip flexion and 90 degrees of knee flexion. They are instructed to cross their arms over the chest. The assessor uses a digital chronometer to measure the amount of time patients are able to stand on a single limb. The test ends when the patient's legs touch each other, the non-stance leg touches the floor, or the arms move from the starting position. This process is repeated three times with eyes open and three times with eyes closed. A two-minute rest period between attempts is considered to prevent fatigue. The average of the three trials is calculated separately. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Dynamic balance

    The Functional Reach Test (FRT) is widely used as a dynamic measure of balance and is a reliable measure of balance for clinical assessment of instability. Participants are asked to stand with their dominant side adjacent to a wall and raise their arm to shoulder height. They are then asked to reach out as far forward as possible while maintaining a firm base of support. A tape measure is attached horizontally to the wall, and the maximum reach distance is recorded as the farthest point of the third metacarpophalangeal joint from the initial (standing) position. In other words, the measures the maximum distance the participants can reach forward from a standing static position. Three trials are performed and the mean value is recorded. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Disability

    Howard Vernon developed the Neck Disability Index (NDI) in 1989. The Neck Disability Index is now a standard tool to measure self-reported disability due to neck pain. This tool has 10 items and each score from 0 to 5. 50 is the maximum score. To get a percentage score, the score obtained is multiplied by two. The average of all other items is then added to the completed items, if a respondent will not answer one or other question,. NDI is a commonly used tool to measure disability in individuals with forward head posture. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Functional status

    The Functional Difficulties Questionnaire measures the functional status of patients following cardiac surgery, with special emphasis on upper extremity and trunk function in patients following median sternotomy. The questionnaire asks patients to rate the difficulty they would experience performing a series of 13 functional upper extremity and trunk tasks. Specifically, patients are required to place a mark along a 10-cm line, with anchors to the left and right of the line, respectively indicating 'no difficulty' and 'maximum difficulty'. For the activities that participants cannot complete when completing the questionnaire, they are required to recall they performed the tasks last time. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Health related Quality of life

    Health related quality of life is assessed by SF-36, a common measure used to assess eight domains including physical functioning, role physical functioning, role emotional functioning, mental health, vitality, social functioning, bodily pain and general health. All scale or single-item measurements range in score from 0 to 100 and are managed by interview. The raw subscale scores are converted to 'norm-based' scores using published algorithms. Norm-based total physical and mental component scores are calculated from the raw subscale scores, with higher scores indicating better quality of life. A higher score in the SF-36 subdomains is associated with a high level of functioning and higher quality of life. The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

  • Pain-related fear beliefs

    The TSK-11 is a widely used tool to measure pain-related fears related to movement and re-injury. It is an adaptation of the original 17-item instrument designed to assess fear of movement or re-injury excluding the 4 original reverse-scored items that were found to have small item-to-total score correlations. The adapted score is an 11-item tool that asks respondents to rate each item on a 4-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 4 (strongly agree). The TSK-11 is a reliable and valid measure of fear of movement or re-injury in patients with chronic pain. It has internal consistency, reliability and convergent validity with a Cronbach's α of 0.80 for the total score (Woby et al., 2005). The participants will be assessed at baseline, one day before surgery (±1 day), after surgery before discharge (7th postoperative day) (±1 day) and 4 weeks post-discharge (±3 days).

    Baseline to nine weeks

Study Arms (3)

Group A: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

ACTIVE COMPARATOR

Consenting participants in this group will receive a standard cardiac rehabilitation protocol.

Other: Group A: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

Group B: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation + therapeutic exercises

EXPERIMENTAL

The participants who give consent will receive standard cardiac rehabilitation protocol (as Group A) with therapeutic exercise in the intervention group.

Other: Group B: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation + therapeutic exercises

Group C: Patients without FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

ACTIVE COMPARATOR

The participants without forward head posture will be included in this group and will receive same standard cardiac rehabilitation as the participants in group A.

Other: Group C: Patients without FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

Interventions

Consenting participants in this group will receive a standard cardiac rehabilitation protocol that includes preoperative education and post-operative exercises, chest physiotherapy, functional mobility and care. Phase 1 begins after the patient has been considered clinically compensated due to the optimization of the clinical treatment and/or the use of an interventional procedure. In this phase, a combination of low-intensity physical exercise (that includes range of motion exercises for upper \& lower extremities + progressive mobilization from sitting on bedside to walking short distance and up to stair climbing), incentive spirometry exercise, percussions, breathing exercises and effective coughing exercises.

Group A: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

The participants who give consent will receive standard cardiac rehabilitation protocol (as Group A) with therapeutic exercise in the intervention group. Therapeutic exercises will be delivered to the participant by treating physiotherapist in physical, verbal and written formats as individualized sessions on the ward 4 weeks before the surgery and keep him doing exercises under supervision while staying in the ward before surgery. A log will be provided to measure performance to ensure program compliance. After discharge from the hospital, the patient will continue exercises at home as performed and guided physically by the therapist and also in the exercises manual and flyer given to the patient. Patients will be instructed to follow therapeutic exercise for 4 weeks pre-operatively and 4 weeks postoperatively after discharge from the hospital.

Group B: Patients with FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation + therapeutic exercises

The participants without forward head posture will be included in this group and will receive same standard cardiac rehabilitation as the participants in group A.

Group C: Patients without FHP receiving standard cardiac rehabilitation

Eligibility Criteria

Age30 Years - 60 Years
Sexmale(Gender-based eligibility)
Healthy VolunteersNo
Age GroupsAdult (18-64)

You may qualify if:

  • Craniovertebral angle \< 50 degrees (included in Group A \& B), Craniovertebral angle ≥ 50 degree (included in Group C)
  • First elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery, valve replacement, or both through a median sternotomy
  • Extubated within 6 hours after surgery

You may not qualify if:

  • Subjects with a history of surgery or any diagnosed pathology or clinical deformity or any musculoskeletal injury within the last six months to the spine or thorax or shoulder or lower extremity
  • Any comorbid lung disease
  • Patients having angina pectoris while doing therapeutic exercises
  • Neurological dis¬orders, neuromuscular disorders, psychiatric, dizziness and blurred vision
  • Inability to stand or walk independently
  • Leg length discrepancy
  • Have been reoperated on/ History of previous cardiac surgery
  • Postoperative cardiac dysfunction, hemodynamically unstable, ventilator dependent
  • Emergency cardiac surgery
  • A length of stay in the intensive care unit for 5 days or more due to medical reasons after cardiac surgery
  • Postoperative wound infections or sternal instability as diagnosed by medical staff

Contact the study team to confirm eligibility.

Sponsors & Collaborators

Study Sites (1)

Rawalpindi Institute of Cardiology

Rawalpindi, Pakistan

Location

MeSH Terms

Interventions

Exercise Therapy

Intervention Hierarchy (Ancestors)

RehabilitationAftercareContinuity of Patient CarePatient CareTherapeuticsPhysical Therapy Modalities

Study Officials

  • Aadil Omer, PhD scholar

    Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran

    PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR
  • Behrouz Attarbashi Moghadam, PhD

    Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran

    STUDY CHAIR
  • Azadeh Shadmehr, PhD

    Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Iran

    STUDY CHAIR

Study Design

Study Type
interventional
Phase
not applicable
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Masking
DOUBLE
Who Masked
PARTICIPANT, OUTCOMES ASSESSOR
Purpose
TREATMENT
Intervention Model
PARALLEL
Sponsor Type
OTHER
Responsible Party
SPONSOR

Study Record Dates

First Submitted

July 4, 2023

First Posted

August 1, 2023

Study Start

August 17, 2023

Primary Completion

December 31, 2023

Study Completion

December 31, 2023

Last Updated

February 28, 2024

Record last verified: 2024-02

Data Sharing

IPD Sharing
Will not share

Locations