Background Running-related injuries (RRIs) can be considered the primary enemy of runners. Most literature on injury prediction and prevention overlooks the mental aspects of overtraining and under-recovery, despite their potential role in injury prediction and prevention. Consequently, knowledge on the role of mental aspects in RRIs is lacking. Objective To investigate mental aspects of overtraining and under-recovery by means of an online injury prevention programme. Methods and analysis The ‘Take a Mental Break!’ study is a randomised controlled trial with a 12 month follow-up. After completing a web-based baseline survey, half and full marathon runners were randomly assigned to the intervention group or the control group. Participants of the intervention group obtained access to an online injury prevention programme, consisting of a running-related smartphone application. This app provided the participants of the intervention group with information on how to prevent overtraining and RRIs with special attention to mental aspects. The primary outcome measure is any self-reported RRI over the past 12 months. Secondary outcome measures include vigour, fatigue, sleep and perceived running performance. Regression analysis will be conducted to investigate whether the injury prevention programme has led to a lower prevalence of RRIs, better health and improved perceived running performance. Ethics and dissemination The Medical Ethics Committee of the University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands, has exempted the current study from ethical approval (reference number: NL64342.041.17). Results of the study will be communicated through scientific articles in peer-reviewed journals, scientific reports and presentations on scientific conferences.
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BACKGROUND: Research suggests that cancer rehabilitation reduces fatigue in survivors of cancer. To date, it is unclear what type of rehabilitation is most beneficial.OBJECTIVE: This randomized controlled trial compared the effect on cancer-related fatigue of physical training combined with cognitive behavioral therapy with physical training alone and with no intervention.DESIGN: In this multicenter randomized controlled trial, 147 survivors of cancer were randomly assigned to a group that received physical training combined with cognitive-behavioral therapy (PT+CBT group, n=76) or to a group that received physical training alone (PT group, n=71). In addition, a nonintervention control group (WLC group) consisting of 62 survivors of cancer who were on the waiting lists of rehabilitation centers elsewhere was included.SETTING: The study was conducted at 4 rehabilitation centers in the Netherlands.PATIENTS: All patients were survivors of cancer.INTERVENTION: Physical training consisting of 2 hours of individual training and group sports took place twice weekly, and cognitive-behavioral therapy took place once weekly for 2 hours.MEASUREMENTS: Fatigue was assessed with the Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory before and immediately after intervention (12 weeks after enrollment). The WLC group completed questionnaires at the same time points.RESULTS: Baseline fatigue did not differ significantly among the 3 groups. Over time, levels of fatigue significantly decreased in all domains in all groups, except in mental fatigue in the WLC group. Analyses of variance of postintervention fatigue showed statistically significant group effects on general fatigue, on physical and mental fatigue, and on reduced activation but not on reduced motivation. Compared with the WLC group, the PT group reported significantly greater decline in 4 domains of fatigue, whereas the PT+CBT group reported significantly greater decline in physical fatigue only. No significant differences in decline in fatigue were found between the PT+CBT and PT groups.CONCLUSIONS: Physical training combined with cognitive-behavioral therapy and physical training alone had significant and beneficial effects on fatigue compared with no intervention. Physical training was equally effective as or more effective than physical training combined with cognitive-behavioral therapy in reducing cancer-related fatigue, suggesting that cognitive-behavioral therapy did not have additional beneficial effects beyond the benefits of physical training.
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Objectives: Decline in the performance of instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) and mobility may be preceded by symptoms the patient experiences, such as fatigue. The aim of this study is to investigate whether self-reported non-task-specific fatigue is a long-term risk factor for IADL-limitations and/or mobility performance in older adults after 10 years. Methods: A prospective study from two previously conducted cross-sectional studies with 10-year follow-up was conducted among 285 males and 249 females aged 40–79 years at baseline. Fatigue was measured by asking “Did you feel tired within the past 4 weeks?” (males) and “Do you feel tired?” (females). Self-reported IADLs were assessed at baseline and follow-up. Mobility was assessed by the 6-minute walk test. Gender-specific associations between fatigue and IADL-limitations and mobility were estimated by multivariable logistic and linear regression models. Results: A total of 18.6% of males and 28.1% of females were fatigued. After adjustment, the odds ratio for fatigued versus non-fatigued males affected by IADL-limitations was 3.3 (P=0.023). In females, the association was weaker and not statistically significant, with odds ratio being 1.7 (P=0.154). Fatigued males walked 39.1 m shorter distance than those non-fatigued (P=0.048). For fatigued females, the distance was 17.5 m shorter compared to those non-fatigued (P=0.479). Conclusion: Our data suggest that self-reported fatigue may be a long-term risk factor for IADL-limitations and mobility performance in middle-aged and elderly males but possibly not in females.
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Jongeren met chronische aandoeningen worden vaak geconfronteerd met problemen in het dagelijks functioneren, waarbij vermoeidheid wordt genoemd als het meest invaliderend. De prevalentie van vermoeidheid onder jongeren met chronische aandoeningen varieert tussen de 51-75%. Vermoeidheid kan onafhankelijk ontstaan van het onderliggende pathologisch mechanisme; uit literatuur blijkt dat ziekte-specifieke benaderingen weinig of nauwelijks effect hebben op vermoeidheid. Vermoeidheid wordt bovendien te laat opgemerkt of blijft onbehandeld. Inzicht in de ziekte-overstijgende mechanismen van vermoeidheid is van belang om vroegtijdig opsporen en de ontwikkeling van passende interventies te faciliteren. Dit postdoc onderzoek richt zich op het ontrafelen van ziekte-overstijgende mechanismen van vermoeidheid vanuit het perspectief van jongeren, het gezin en de fysieke en sociale leefomgeving. Binnen een longitudinale cohortstudie gedurende 12 maanden worden 208 jongeren met verschillende chronische aandoeningen gemonitord. Naast traditionele onderzoeksmethodieken zoals vragenlijsten en fysieke testen, wordt gebruik gemaakt van remote sensoring, linked data en context mapping (=kwalitatieve methode). Studenten die participeren in het onderzoek zullen de mogelijkheden en beperkingen van zulke methoden ervaren. Dit kan o.a. bijdragen aan het integreren van zorgtechnologie in het dagelijks (kinder)fysiotherapeutisch handelen. We ontwikkelen een theoretisch raamwerk dat de basis legt voor betere vroegdetectie (op afstand en non-invasief) van vermoeidheid en voor het identificeren van mogelijke aangrijpingspunten voor behandeling (doelstelling 1 en 2). Verder draagt het postdoc onderzoek bij aan een beter inzicht in de rol van de sociale en fysieke leefomgeving bij de maatschappelijke participatie van jongeren met chronische aandoeningen (doelstelling 3). Studenten zullen in veldwerk ter plaatse metingen doen, de leefsituatie verkennen en samen met zorgprofessionals en docenten hun klinische blik verrijken. Doordat zij daadwerkelijk in de leefomgeving van jongeren zelf aanwezig zijn kan dit bijdragen aan bewustzijn over de rol van verschillende sociale en fysieke factoren op vermoeidheid en op de maatschappelijke participatie van jongeren met uiteenlopende chronische aandoeningen.