This study aims to investigate the effects of an 8-week combined exercise program on male individuals in drug rehabilitation. The program integrates resistance-based breathing training with aerobic exercise. The investigators seek to determine whether this combined exercise program is more effective than a single form of exercise in improving participants' physical health and quality of life. The primary research questions to be addressed include: Does this combined exercise program produce better results than single-form training (resistance-based breathing training or aerobic exercise performed separately) in improving physiological indicators such as cardiopulmonary function and muscle strength in male individuals in drug rehabilitation? Does this combined exercise program yield greater benefits than single-form training in reducing anxiety and depression and improving quality of life among men in drug rehabilitation? This study will conduct a randomized controlled trial. Researchers will compare three different intervention groups-the combined training group, the resistance-breathing training group, and the aerobic exercise group-to verify the potential advantages of the combined program over single-form exercise. Participants will: Complete an 8-week exercise intervention, consisting of three sessions per week, each lasting approximately 40 minutes, under professional guidance and supervision. Undergo comprehensive assessments before and after the intervention, including cardiopulmonary function tests, body composition analysis, and questionnaires on mental health and quality of life.
1. Exploration and Standardization of a Combined Exercise Program Tailored for Drug Rehabilitation Facilities. This section forms the foundation of the study and aims to develop an 8-week combined exercise program that is safe, effective, and easy to implement, specifically tailored to the environment and characteristics of residents in compulsory isolation drug rehabilitation centers. The content not only covers specific methods for integrating resistance-based breathing exercises with aerobic exercises (such as sequence, frequency, intensity, and duration) but also focuses on designing standardized operating procedures. These include concise instructions for participants, demonstration videos, key safety monitoring points (such as using the Borg Subjective Fatigue Scale or heart rate monitoring), and contingency plans for addressing common issues. The goal is to produce a "ready-to-use" guidebook that lays a solid foundation for subsequent implementation. 2. Empirical Validation and Comparison of the Combined Exercise Program's Efficacy. This section constitutes the core of the study, aiming to empirically validate the actual effectiveness of this combined program for male individuals in the drug rehabilitation phase through a randomized controlled trial. Effectiveness evaluation will be entirely centered on the application objectives. It will primarily include: ① Physical Health: Focusing on verifying its effectiveness in improving areas of weakness among drug rehabilitation participants, such as cardiopulmonary function, muscle strength, and body composition; ② Mental Health and Quality of Life: Focusing on its positive impact on core rehabilitation goals such as anxiety and depression, sleep quality, and drug craving. The investigators will employ a controlled design with a combined-training group and a single-training group to address a key practical question: Does this combined program produce a "1+1\>2" synergistic effect compared with single-modality resistance-breathing training or aerobic exercise, thereby offering greater practical value?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
90
Warm-up (5 minutes) → Threshold resistance breathing trainer (30 minutes) → Cool-down stretches (5 minutes).During joint training, each session lasts 15 minutes.
Warm-up (5 minutes) → Main exercise (30 minutes, at 65%-85% of maximum heart rate or a Borg RPE score of 12-14) → Cool-down and stretching (5 minutes).During joint training sessions, each training session lasts 15 minutes.
Yongtingli
Luzhou, China
RECRUITINGQuality of Life Scale for Drug Addicts
Minimum score: 41, Maximum score: 205.Higher scores indicate worse quality of life and more severe impairment in physical, psychological, social, and withdrawal-related symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
6-Minute Walk Test
The maximum distance a subject can cover in 6 minutes while walking at maximum speed along a 30-meter flat corridor. This test is used to assess cardiopulmonary function and exercise endurance during submaximal exercise.
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
BMI
Weight (kg) and height (m) will be combined and reported as BMI, expressed in kg/m²
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
Body Composition
Data was measured and analyzed using bioelectrical impedance analysis (BIA) with a body composition analyzer (MC-780MA, TANITA), including: body fat mass, skeletal muscle mass, body water, visceral fat, and basal metabolic rate.
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
Symptom Checklist-90
Symptom Checklist-90 (SCL-90); range 90-450; higher scores = worse mental health. Dimensions: somatization, obsessive-compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, psychoticism, sleep and eating.
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
Vital Capacity
A spirometer is used to measure the maximum volume of air a subject can exhale after taking a deep breath. This measurement is used to assess lung ventilation function. The unit of measurement is milliliters (mL).
Time frame: Baseline (Week 0), after the intervention (Week 9)
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