Physical Activity Barriers in Adolescent Hypertension Patients

Sponsor
Hacettepe University (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT05461989
Collaborator
(none)
66
8

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

One of the most prevalent chronic disorders in children, especially teenagers, is hypertension . The prevalence of hypertension has significantly increased in recent years, particularly with the rise in obesity. It has been demonstrated that hypertension is a significant, controllable risk factor for cardiovascular disease and that it is linked to atherosclerosis in children. Additionally, in patients with hypertension who were monitored from infancy to adulthood, it was discovered that the unfavorable cardiac alterations and vascular damage linked to hypertension were linked to early cardiovascular disease in adults. Therefore, the key to preventing cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents-especially when risk factors like obesity, diabetes, or chronic renal disease are present-is early diagnosis and effective treatment of hypertension. Insufficient exercise and sedentary lifestyles are additional risk factors for pediatric hypertension.Investigating physical activity barrier in teenage hypertension patients is vital in light of all these factors as well as studies on adolescents' inadequate physical activity. The literature is lacking studies examining the obstacles to physical exercise faced by people with adolescent hypertension, hence this topic is open for investigation.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Anthropometric measurement
  • Other: Level of Physical Activity
  • Other: Physical Activity Barriers Scale
  • Other: Hand Grip Strength
  • Other: Arterial stiffness

Detailed Description

One of the most prevalent chronic disorders in children, especially teenagers, is hypertension . The prevalence of hypertension has significantly increased in recent years, particularly with the rise in obesity . Primary hypertension, also known as essential hypertension, which was once thought to be an adult condition, is becoming more prevalent in the pediatric population, partly because of the obesity pandemic . Children who are obese have a three times higher risk of developing hypertension than children who are not obese . Based on the etiology, hypertension can be divided into two types: primary or essential hypertension, which has no known cause, and secondary hypertension, which has a known cause. Stage I (mild) hypertension is the most common symptom of primary hypertension, which is also linked to a favorable family history . Very young children, those with stage II hypertension, and those with clinical signs suggesting systemic disorders linked to hypertension should all be evaluated for secondary hypertension. An underlying vascular, neurological, endocrine, or renal parenchymal illness may cause secondary hypertension .

It has been demonstrated that hypertension is a significant, controllable risk factor for cardiovascular disease and that it is linked to atherosclerosis in children. Additionally, in patients with hypertension who were monitored from infancy to adulthood, it was discovered that the unfavorable cardiac alterations and vascular damage linked to hypertension were linked to early cardiovascular disease in adults.Therefore, the key to preventing cardiovascular disease in children and adolescents-especially when risk factors like obesity, diabetes, or chronic renal disease are present-is early diagnosis and effective treatment of hypertension.

Insufficient exercise and sedentary lifestyles are additional risk factors for pediatric hypertension. Low levels of physical activity and hypertension have a continuous, temporal, and independent association, according to epidemiological research . According to data, 80% of kids and teenagers in 105 countries do not engage in the recommended amount of physical exercise, which is at least 60 minutes of moderate to strenuous activity per day.Additionally, many kids and teenagers engage in sedentary activities for more than 4 hours per day, even though less than 2 hours per day are advised for screen-based entertainment (such as watching TV, using a computer, and playing video games). According to research, children and adolescents who watch television or spend too much time on screens had lower fitness levels, worse self-esteem, less prosocial behavior, and higher systolic and diastolic blood pressure. Prospective research regularly demonstrates that exercise shields adults from high blood pressure. Physical activity has been dubbed a "poly-drug" for its preventive and therapeutic effects in reducing the global health burden of cardiovascular disease, increasing physiological function, and slowing cardiovascular aging.Investigating physical activity barrier in teenage hypertension patients is vital in light of all these factors as well as studies on adolescents' inadequate physical activity. The literature is lacking studies examining the obstacles to physical exercise faced by people with adolescent hypertension, hence this topic is open for investigation.

Study Design

Study Type:
Observational [Patient Registry]
Anticipated Enrollment :
66 participants
Observational Model:
Case-Control
Time Perspective:
Cross-Sectional
Official Title:
Physical Activity Barriers in Adolescent Hypertension Patients
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Sep 30, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Mar 30, 2023
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
May 30, 2023

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
primary hypertension

adolesence primary hypertension patients

Other: Anthropometric measurement
It will be measured with the Xiaomi Body Composition Scale II, and a total of 9 measurements will be made as a result of the measurements.

Other: Level of Physical Activity
The scale to be used for this purpose is the Child Physical Activity Questionnaire (CPAQ) developed by Kowalski et al. It is a seven-day self-reported recall scale designed to assess moderate-intensity physical activity in children aged 8-14 years. CFAQ is designed to be implemented throughout the school year.

Other: Physical Activity Barriers Scale
It consists of three surveys in total, which are: A) Scale of Expectations Regarding Physical Activity for Children B) Children's perception of family support regarding physical activity scale C) Physical Activity Barriers Scale for Parents

Other: Hand Grip Strength
Hand grip strength will be measured using a hand dynamometer (Jamar, Sammons Preston, Rolyon, Bolingbrook, IL).

Other: Arterial stiffness
Arterial stiffness will be evaluated using the pulse wave velocity (PWV) technique with the blood pressure holter-ABPM (Mobil-O-Graph, I.E.M., Stolberg, Germany) device. The measurement is made from the non-dominant arm based on the principle of blood pressure measurement with the appropriate cuff determined according to the arm diameter. After two consecutive measurements taken 30 seconds apart, the average of the measurement values will be recorded.

secondary hypertension

adolesence secondary hypertension patients

Other: Anthropometric measurement
It will be measured with the Xiaomi Body Composition Scale II, and a total of 9 measurements will be made as a result of the measurements.

Other: Level of Physical Activity
The scale to be used for this purpose is the Child Physical Activity Questionnaire (CPAQ) developed by Kowalski et al. It is a seven-day self-reported recall scale designed to assess moderate-intensity physical activity in children aged 8-14 years. CFAQ is designed to be implemented throughout the school year.

Other: Physical Activity Barriers Scale
It consists of three surveys in total, which are: A) Scale of Expectations Regarding Physical Activity for Children B) Children's perception of family support regarding physical activity scale C) Physical Activity Barriers Scale for Parents

Other: Hand Grip Strength
Hand grip strength will be measured using a hand dynamometer (Jamar, Sammons Preston, Rolyon, Bolingbrook, IL).

Other: Arterial stiffness
Arterial stiffness will be evaluated using the pulse wave velocity (PWV) technique with the blood pressure holter-ABPM (Mobil-O-Graph, I.E.M., Stolberg, Germany) device. The measurement is made from the non-dominant arm based on the principle of blood pressure measurement with the appropriate cuff determined according to the arm diameter. After two consecutive measurements taken 30 seconds apart, the average of the measurement values will be recorded.

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. physical activity barriers [12 months]

    With a scale consisting of three questionnaires in total (Parent Physical Activity Barriers scale, the Child Physical Activity Outcome Expectancies Scale, and the Child Physical Activity Home Environment scale), the barriers of individuals to physical activity will be evaluated. As a result of these evaluations, it will guide us to understand the causes of physical activity barriers in primary and secondary hypertension patients.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
10 Years to 19 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
All
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
No

For Primary Hypertension

Inclusion Criteria:
  • Being 10-19 years old,

  • Being diagnosed with primary hypertension,

  • Being clinically stable and no drug/drug dose changes for the last four weeks,

  • Determined to be voluntary to participate in the study

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Having a neurological, cognitive or orthopedic disease that will affect the measurements,

  • Severe respiratory system disease (FEV1 <35%; FVC <50%),

  • Having acute infection,

  • Having malignancy,

  • Receiving hormone replacement therapy,

  • Body mass index >40 kg/m²,

  • Ejection fraction less than 50%,

  • Having uncontrolled hypertension,

  • Individuals with diabetes will not be included in the study.

For Secondary Hypertension

Inclusion Criteria:
  • Being 10-19 years old,

  • Being diagnosed with secondary hypertension,

  • Being clinically stable and no drug/drug dose changes for the last four weeks,

  • Not being under high-dose glucocorticoid therapy (2 mg/kg/day),

  • Not taking intravenous biologic or conventional immunosuppressive therapy (including pulsed steroids) in the past month

  • Determined to be voluntary to participate in the study

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Having a neurological, cognitive or orthopedic disease that will affect the measurements,

  • Severe respiratory system disease (FEV1 <35%; FVC <50%),

  • Having acute infection,

  • Having malignancy,

  • Receiving hormone replacement therapy,

  • Body mass index >40 kg/m²,

  • Ejection fraction less than 50%,

  • Having uncontrolled hypertension,

  • Individuals with diabetes will not be included in the study.

Contacts and Locations

Locations

No locations specified.

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • Hacettepe University

Investigators

None specified.

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
E.Burcu ÖZCAN, Physical Activity Barriers in Adolescent Hypertension Patients, Hacettepe University
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT05461989
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • GO 22/505
First Posted:
Jul 18, 2022
Last Update Posted:
Jul 18, 2022
Last Verified:
Jul 1, 2022
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
No
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Jul 18, 2022