Author:
Carta Mauro Giovanni,Velluzzi Fernanda,Monticone Marco,Aviles Gonzalez Cesar Ivan,Minerba Luigi,Pau Massimiliano,Musu Mario,Atzori Laura,Ferreli Caterina,Cauli Alberto,Machado Sergio,Pintus Elisa,Fortin Dario,Romano Ferdinando,Penna Maria Pietronilla,Preti Antonio,Cossu Giulia
Abstract
Background:
Chronic Pain (CP) is a crucial determinant for disability in older adults. CP amplifies the impact of other common age-related diseases and increases cardiovascular risk. Physical exercise can improve CP. Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs) with high-intensity exercise in older adults excluded people with Moderate Chronic Illness (MCI) and CP.
Objective:
This study aimed at evaluating in an RCT whether moderate exercise training can improve chronic pain in a sample of older adults, including people with MCI, and if any modification persists over time.
Methods:
A sample of 120 older adults was randomly selected for a moderate-intensity exercise program or cultural activities (control group). Chronic pain was assessed at t0, at t12 (end of the trial), and t48 weeks, by means of the Italian version of the SIP-Roland Scale.
Results:
Seventy-nine participants completed the follow-up (age 72.3±4.7, women 55.3%). At the end of RCT, an improvement in the SIP scale score was found in the exercise group (p=0.035), showing a lower score than the control group; this difference was not maintained at 48 weeks (p=0.235).
Conclusion:
Our study highlighted that a moderate-intensity exercise intervention reduced chronic pain in older adults, but this effect disappeared at follow-up after 36 weeks from the end of the training program. These findings suggested that such kinds of programs, easily accessible to old people even with MCI, should be implemented and supported over time, thus promoting active aging and preventing CP of age-related diseases.
Clinical Trial Registration: Clinical.Trials.gov.NCT03858114
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Neuroscience (miscellaneous)
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