High Intensity Interval Training and Rheumatoid Arthritis
Status: | Completed |
---|---|
Conditions: | Arthritis, Rheumatoid Arthritis |
Therapuetic Areas: | Rheumatology |
Healthy: | No |
Age Range: | 60 - 80 |
Updated: | 12/9/2016 |
Start Date: | September 2015 |
The Effects of High-Intensity Interval Training on Inflammation in Adults With Rheumatoid Arthritis
The overall objective is to determine whether High Intensity Interval Training (HIIT) has
potential to improve disease activity scores for Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) patients. By
reducing inflammation and modifying immune function HIIT may offer a substantial paradigm
shift in RA care, especially in older persons with RA who experience aging
related-immunesenescence, increased systemic inflammation and greater physical inactivity
than young persons. Prior to embarking on a large scale trial of HIIT-induced disease
modification, this pilot study aims to demonstrate that HIIT can produce measurable
responses in disease activity scores and peak VO2in persons undergoing routine pharmacologic
treatment for RA.
potential to improve disease activity scores for Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) patients. By
reducing inflammation and modifying immune function HIIT may offer a substantial paradigm
shift in RA care, especially in older persons with RA who experience aging
related-immunesenescence, increased systemic inflammation and greater physical inactivity
than young persons. Prior to embarking on a large scale trial of HIIT-induced disease
modification, this pilot study aims to demonstrate that HIIT can produce measurable
responses in disease activity scores and peak VO2in persons undergoing routine pharmacologic
treatment for RA.
Inclusion Criteria:
- Seropositive (positive rheumatoid factor or anti-citrullinated protein antibody) or
erosions typical of RA on radiographs.
- History of fulfilling 2010 ACR/EULAR Classification Criteria for RA
- Able to walk on a treadmill
- Not participating in regular physical exercise (more than 60 minutes of moderate
intensity or 30 minutes of vigorous intensity exercise per week) or weight reduction
dieting.
- No medication changes within the last three months.
- Willing to forego knee joint injections, regular NSAID use, and use acetaminophen for
any necessary analgesia during the course of the intervention.
- No current (within the last three weeks) pharmacologic therapy with corticosteroids.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Coronary artery disease
- Diabetes mellitus
- Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- Absolute contra-indications to exercise: Recent (<6 months) acute cardiac event
unstable angina, uncontrolled dysrhythmias causing symptoms or hemodynamic
compromise, symptomatic aortic stenosis, uncontrolled symptomatic heart failure,
acute pulmonary embolus, acute myocarditis or pericarditis, suspected or known
dissecting aneurism and acute systemic infection.
- Other inflammatory arthropathy or myopathy, Paget's disease, pigmented villonodular
synovitis, joint infection, ochronosis, neuropathic arthropathy, osteochondromatosis,
acromegaly, hemochromatosis, Wilson's disease, osteonecrosis, knee replacement.
- Contraindicated Medicine: ticlopidine, clopidogrel, dipyridamole, warfarin, heparin,
enoxaparin and other blood thinners.
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