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Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Treatment (H.A.R.T)
This study has been completed.
Study NCT00038285   Information provided by Department of Veterans Affairs
First Received: May 29, 2002   Last Updated: January 20, 2009   History of Changes

May 29, 2002
January 20, 2009
April 2002
 
 
 
Complete list of historical versions of study NCT00038285 on ClinicalTrials.gov Archive Site
 
 
 
Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Treatment (H.A.R.T)
Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Treatment (H.A.R.T)

In the VA, we are achieving progress in decreasing amputation rates through early identification and multidisciplinary treatment of patients at risk for limb loss. Despite these accomplishments, however, clinical outcomes post-amputation, especially for PVD patients, have changed little because of patients' poor cardiovascular condition complicated by the injurious consequences of imposed inactivity begun in the preoperative period and continuing through convalescence. If not aggressively managed throughout all phases of recovery, these problems quickly render patients, already at risk, incapable of the rigors of rehabilitation as well as lead to reamputation, rehabilitation failure, and secondary complications. In our research, we are trying to transform this clinical scenario by applying what has succeeded in cardiac rehabilitation to services provided to amputees. In a series of studies, we are studying how to incorporate secondary CV risk factor modification and aggressive exercise interventions into conventional amputation rehabilitation through a program that we have named Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Therapy (Healthy H.A.R.T.). Our goal is to better: 1) increase aerobic capacity and promote rehabilitation achievements and quality of life, and 2) prevent postoperative complications and curtail further peripheral vascular deterioration through interventions found successful in cardiac rehabilitation. The basic assumption of this study will be that cardiovascular status and, thus, aerobic capacity is a most critical factor for rehabilitation success.

The overall goal of this line of investigation is to evaluate the efficacy of an integrated cardiovascular amputation rehabilitation program (Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Therapy (Healthy H.A.R.T.)) that concentrates on secondary CV risk factor modification and utilizes an aggressive exercise program to: 1) increase aerobic capacity and promote rehabilitation achievements and quality of life and 2) prevent postoperative complications and curtail further peripheral vascular deterioration. Given the recognized merits of systematically building upon incremental research achievements to develop comprehensive and multi-faceted clinical programs, we will study the above one step at a time, working up to more wide-scale investigations of the benefits of the integrated Healthy H.A.R.T. program as conceptualized. The following phases are planned:

Part 1 (this proposed 3-year study): examining the clinical effectiveness of Healthy H.A.R.T.'s exercise components. Findings will be disseminated through presentations and publications during and immediately following study completion.

Part 2: revising amputation rehabilitation and P.A.C.T. program care algorithms as indicated by Phase 1 findings.

Part 3: investigating how to implement Healthy H.A.R.T.'s exercise components in distance, off-site, and home-based programs.

Part 4: developing broader scale investigations of additional components of Healthy H.A.R.T. using physiologic and patient care outcome measures, cost-benefit ratios, patient and clinician satisfaction, and service potential offset by resource utilization and expense reports for widespread application.

Key Question/Hypothesis: In Healthy H.A.R.T. Part 1, we will test the hypothesis: Dysvascular amputees participating in an aggressive exercise program (Healthy H.A.R.T. exercise) in conjunction with amputation rehabilitation will obtain a greater aerobic capacity and exhibit better rehabilitation achievements and quality of life than those receiving conventional amputation.

Experimental Design: This study (Healthy Heart Amputation Rehabilitation Therapy (Healthy HART) - Part 1) involves an intent-to-treat designed randomized 2-group pre- and post-intervention study to examine if conventional rehabilitation augmented by Healthy H.A.R.T. exercise: a) increases aerobic capacity, b) promotes rehabilitation achievements, and c) improves quality of life. Last, cost estimates of the two therapies will be compared.

Houston VAMC amputation patients progress through standardized decision making regarding surgery options and level of amputation followed by conventional post-operative medical and surgical care and rehabilitation according to standard VA Amputee Care Algorithm schedules.

Standard Decisions on Surgery and Amputation Level: Decisions about elective amputations performed by the General Surgery service are made jointly with surgeon and PM&R consultation. Decisions regarding amputation level are made in light of surgeon-assessed clinical and physiologic signs and patient characteristics and PM&R assessments of functionality and patient characteristics such as cognitive function, comorbidity, and rehabilitation potential.

Phase II
Interventional
Prevention, Randomized, Open Label, Active Control, Single Group Assignment, Efficacy Study
Vascular Disease
Procedure: Amputation Prevention
 
 

*   Includes publications given by the data provider as well as publications identified by National Clinical Trials Identifier (NCT ID) in Medline.
 
Completed
 
March 2005
 

Peripheral Vascular Disease

Both
18 Years and older
No
Contact information is only displayed when the study is recruiting subjects
United States
 
NCT00038285
 
A2830R
Department of Veterans Affairs
 
Investigator: David Wolff, Ph.D. Special Assistant to the Director Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), VA Rehabilitation Research & Development Service
Investigator: Wijegupta Ellepola, Program Analyst Program Analysis and Review Section (PARS), VA Rehabilitation Research and Development Service
Department of Veterans Affairs
May 2002

ICMJE     Data element required by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors and the World Health Organization ICTRP