Heart failure accelerometry
Research type
Research Study
Full title
Identifying physical activity through accelerometry in heart failure
IRAS ID
225596
Contact name
Grace Dibben
Contact email
Sponsor organisation
University of Exeter
Duration of Study in the UK
0 years, 11 months, 3 days
Research summary
The precise measurement of physical activity is now possible with advances in wearable technology, namely accelerometers. This is useful in order to properly evaluate interventions such as cardiac rehabilitation that aim to increase physical activity. One of the challenges with accelerometry is the need for raw data to be translated into meaningful behavioural units. This is addressed through a calibration study, where accelerometry data is related to oxygen consumption and cut points are derived where activity is considered light, moderate or vigorous intensity. However, calibration studies have only been done in young and healthy adults, not in the elderly or those with chronic disease such as heart failure where movements are slower and exercise capacity is reduced. This means there is a risk of underestimating the true level of physical activity in this population. Therefore the aim of this study is to run a calibration study with 18-30 heart failure patients.
Adults (aged 18 years and older) diagnosed with heart failure, with stable symptoms that are willing and able to give informed consent will be eligible for the study. Patients with contraindications to physical activity will be excluded from the study. Patients will be identified from the Royal Devon & Exeter NHS Foundation Trust and the study will be conducted in the sports science laboratory at St Luke's Campus, University of Exeter. Each patient will be required to attend a single study visit that should last approximately 3 hours in total. During the visit patients will be required to complete a number of physical activity tasks (such as lying, sitting and walking) whilst wearing various accelerometers and gas analysis equipment.
REC name
East of England - Cambridge South Research Ethics Committee
REC reference
18/EE/0019
Date of REC Opinion
16 Feb 2018
REC opinion
Further Information Favourable Opinion