AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study aims to assess how different intensities of supervised exercise, along with lifestyle counseling, can effectively manage metabolic syndrome risk factors in low-active adults aged 30-55 over 40 weeks.
  • - Participants will be divided into three groups: one receiving aerobic interval training, another undergoing low-to-moderate continuous training, and a control group receiving counseling only.
  • - The outcomes measured include various metabolic risk factors, physical fitness, and lifestyle changes, as well as an evaluation of the economic cost-effectiveness of the program.

Article Abstract

Background: The primary aim of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of different doses (intensity) of supervised exercise training - concomitant with lifestyle counselling - as a primary care intervention tool for the management of metabolic syndrome risk factors in low-active adults with one or more such factors (programme name in Catalan: Bellugat de CAP a peus).

Methods/design: Three-arm, randomized controlled clinical trial implemented in the primary care setting, with a duration of 40 weeks (16 weeks intervention and 24-week follow-up). Adults aged 30 to 55 years with metabolic risk factors will be randomized into three intervention groups: 1) aerobic interval training (16 supervised training lessons) plus a healthy lifestyle counselling programme (6 group and 3 individual meetings); 2) low-to-moderate intensity continuous training (16 supervised training lessons) plus the same counselling programme; or 3) the counselling- programme without any supervised physical exercise. The main output variables assessed will be risk factors for metabolic syndrome (waist circumference, blood pressure, and levels of plasma triglycerides, high-density lipoproteins and glucose), systemic inflammation, cardiorespiratory fitness, physical activity and sedentary behaviour, dietary habits, health-related quality of life, self-efficacy and empowerment. Economic factors will also be analysed in order to determine the cost-effectiveness of the programme. These variables will be assessed three times during the study: at baseline, at the end of the intervention, and at follow-up. We estimate to recruit 35 participants per group.

Discussion: The results of this study will provide insight into the immediate and medium-term effects on metabolic risk and lifestyle of a combined approach involving aerobic interval training and a multidisciplinary behavioural intervention. If effective, the proposed intervention would provide both researchers and practitioners in this field with a platform on which to develop similar intervention programmes for tackling the repercussions of an unhealthy lifestyle.

Trial Registration: Clinical trials.gov. NTC02832453 . Registered 6 July 2016 (retrospectively registered).

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5351047PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12889-017-4144-8DOI Listing

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