The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of weight loss via hypocaloric diet (CR)and aerobic exercise (AT) compared to the effects of weight loss via hypocaloric diet (CR), aerobic training (AT)and resistance training (RT).
Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFPEF) is the most common form of HF, is nearly unique to the older population, particularly older women, and is increasing in prevalence. Exercise intolerance, with severe exertional dyspnea and fatigue, is the primary manifestation of chronic HFPEF and is a major determinant of these patients' severely reduced quality of life (QOL). However, its pathophysiology is poorly understood and its optimal treatment remains undefined. Our recent data and others' indicate that in older HFPEF patients, both increased adiposity and abnormalities in skeletal muscle are major contributors to exercise intolerance and potential therapeutic targets. Obesity is one of the strongest risk factors for HFPEF, and is a robust predictor of physical disability in older persons. The investigator recently reported that in HFPEF compared to age-matched controls, percent total and leg lean mass are significantly reduced and independently predict exercise capacity. Using MRI and needle biopsy of the thigh muscle, the investigators found increased fat infiltration, reduced capillary density and percent type I oxidative fibers, and trends for reduced muscle mitochondrial mass and function. Reduced exercise capacity was related to each of these muscle abnormalities, supporting their important role in HFPEF. Diet, with or without aerobic exercise, can increase exercise capacity and quality of life in older obese persons with a variety of disorders, but usually results in significant loss of skeletal muscle mass, which could potentially have adverse long term consequences. The purpose of this trial is to determine if addition of resistance training to diet plus aerobic exercise training can improve skeletal muscle mass and function in HFPEF. Multiple lines of evidence and our preliminary data indicate that resistance training (RT) may be an ideal addition to CR+AT for HFPEF, since RT reliably increases muscle mass, quality, strength, and function, significantly more than AT, and can prevent nearly 50% of the muscle mass loss during CR. Therefore, the primary aim of the proposed study is to conduct a randomized, single-blinded 20-week intervention trial of RT added to CR+AT in 84 overweight / obese (BMI greater than 28 kg/m2), older (age greater than 60 years) HFPEF patients to test the following primary hypothesis: The addition of resistance training to CR+AT will improve exercise capacity.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
88
hypocaloric diet individual exercise prescription for aerobic training individual exercise prescription for resistance training.
hypocaloric diet individual prescription for aerobic training.
Wake Forest Baptist Health
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, United States
Peak Exercise Oxygen Consumption (VO2)
Peak exercise oxygen consumption (VO2) pre and post intervention
Time frame: 20 weeks
Skeletal Muscle Mass
Measure skeletal muscle mass in kg by DEXA analysis pre and post intervention.
Time frame: 20 weeks
Thigh Skeletal Muscle Mass
Measure skeletal muscle mass by MRI analysis pre and post intervention.
Time frame: 20 weeks
Thigh Muscle Composition
MRI skeletal muscle to intermuscular fat ratio
Time frame: 20 weeks
Muscle Strength
maximal isokinetic knee extensor strength (Newton-meters, Nm) using an isokinetic dynamometer (Biodex®)
Time frame: 20 weeks
Muscle Quality
knee extensor strength to thigh muscle area assessed by MRI (Nm/cm2).
Time frame: 20 weeks
Quality of Life Measured by Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ) Overall Summary Score
The KCCQ Overall Summary Summary Score is a heart failure disease-specific quality of life measure encompassing domains of physical limitation, HF symptoms, quality of life, and social limitation scored on a scale of 0-100 with higher scores indicating better health status.
Time frame: 20 weeks
Quality of Life Measured by Short Form 36 Item Questionnaire (SF-36)
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The SF-36 is a quality of life assessment with 2 component scores (Physical Composite Score and Mental Composite Score) ranging 0-100 with higher scores indicating better health status.
Time frame: 20 weeks