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Tai Ji Quan for Preventing Falls in Mild Cognitive Impairment

N/A
Recruiting
Research Sponsored by Oregon Research Institute
Eligibility Criteria Checklist
Specific guidelines that determine who can or cannot participate in a clinical trial
Must have
Be older than 65 years old
Timeline
Screening 3 weeks
Treatment Varies
Follow Up baseline, 4 months, 6 months, 12 months
Awards & highlights
No Placebo-Only Group

Summary

This trial tests whether tai ji quan can reduce falls in older adults with mild cognitive impairment.

Who is the study for?
This trial is for older adults, aged 65 and above, who have mild cognitive impairment. They must have experienced at least one fall in the past year or take longer than normal to complete a walking test. Participants should not be currently doing tai ji quan exercises regularly and must be able to walk on their own for short distances.
What is being tested?
The study is testing if special exercise training called dual-task tai ji quan can help prevent falls compared to standard tai ji quan or simple stretching exercises. Older adults with memory complaints will practice these activities to see which is more effective.
What are the potential side effects?
While there are no major side effects expected from tai ji quan or stretching exercises, participants may experience muscle soreness or fatigue as they adapt to the physical activity involved in the training.

Timeline

Screening ~ 3 weeks
Treatment ~ Varies
Follow Up ~baseline, 4 months, 6 months, 12 months
This trial's timeline: 3 weeks for screening, Varies for treatment, and baseline, 4 months, 6 months, 12 months for reporting.

Treatment Details

Study Objectives

Study objectives can provide a clearer picture of what you can expect from a treatment.
Primary study objectives
Self-reported number of falls
Secondary study objectives
30-second chair stand
Backward Digit Span
Category Fluency
+7 more
Other study objectives
Activity-specific Balance Confidence
EuroQol EQ-5D
Frailty Questionnaire
+3 more

Awards & Highlights

No Placebo-Only Group
All patients enrolled in this study will receive some form of active treatment.

Trial Design

3Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Group I: Stretching exerciseExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
This active control intervention includes light activities that consist of breathing, stretching, and relaxation exercises. Each exercise session encompasses a variety of light and static stretches for joints and muscles, performed in a seated or standing position. Exercise involves the upper body (arms, neck, upper back, shoulder, back, and chest), lower extremities (quadriceps, hamstrings/calfs, and hips), and gentle and slow trunk rotations. Also included are intermittent light walking, deep abdominal breathing exercises that emphasize inhaling and exhaling to maximum capacity, and progressive relaxation of major muscle groups.
Group II: Standard tai ji quanExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
This intervention includes training of tai ji quan forms with synchronized breathing, supplemented by a set of mini-therapeutic exercises. The training involves repeated practice of (a) symmetrical, coordinated, trunk-driven tai ji quan form movements, (b) controlled displacement (weight-shifting) of the body's center of mass over varying sizes of the base of support, (c) dynamic eye-hand movements during whole-body motion, and (d) multidirectional (anterior-posterior and medial-lateral) stepping. As a balance training therapy, movement practices emphasize a dynamic interplay of stabilizing and self-induced destabilizing postural actions and balance exercises that target mobility, stability limits, and sensory integration.
Group III: Dual-task taj ji quanExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
This intervention includes training of (a) symmetrical postural tai ji quan forms/movements synchronized with breathing, (b) controlled displacement (weight-shifting) of the body's center of mass over the base of support, (c) dynamic eye-hand movements during whole-body motion, (d) multidirectional (anterior-posterior and medial-lateral) stepping, and (e) rotational ankle sway and self-induced reactive postural recovery actions. The training practices are integrated, gradually over time, with a mix of interactive, cognitively stimulating, dual-task exercises that challenge attention control, working memory, verbalization, response inhibition, processing speed, dual tasking, task switching/prioritization, and spatial orientation and postural awareness.
Treatment
First Studied
Drug Approval Stage
How many patients have taken this drug
stretching
2019
Completed Phase 2
~100

Find a Location

Who is running the clinical trial?

Oregon Research InstituteLead Sponsor
86 Previous Clinical Trials
62,558 Total Patients Enrolled

Media Library

Dual-Task Tai Ji Quan Clinical Trial Eligibility Overview. Trial Name: NCT05725668 — N/A
Mild Cognitive Impairment Research Study Groups: Dual-task taj ji quan, Standard tai ji quan, Stretching exercise
Mild Cognitive Impairment Clinical Trial 2023: Dual-Task Tai Ji Quan Highlights & Side Effects. Trial Name: NCT05725668 — N/A
Dual-Task Tai Ji Quan 2023 Treatment Timeline for Medical Study. Trial Name: NCT05725668 — N/A
~224 spots leftby Jul 2027