Supervised Exercise Immediately After Bariatric Surgery: the Study Protocol of the EFIBAR Randomized Controlled Trial
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Artero, Enrique G.; Villa González, Emilio; Barranco Ruiz, Yaira María; Femia Marzo, Pedro JesúsEditorial
Springer
Materia
Obesity Bariatric surgery Exercise Randomized controlled trial (RCT) Protocol
Fecha
2021-07-15Referencia bibliográfica
Artero, E.G... [et al.]. Supervised Exercise Immediately After Bariatric Surgery: the Study Protocol of the EFIBAR Randomized Controlled Trial. OBES SURG (2021). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s11695-021-05559-8]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO), Plan Nacional de I+D+i calls RETOS DEP2016-74926-R RTI2018-093302-A-I00; Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities FPU18/01107 FPU17/01158; predoctoral fellowship program of the University of AlmeriaResumen
Background Previous studies have investigated weight loss caused by exercise following bariatric surgery. However, in most
cases, the training programis poorly reported; the exercise type, volume, and intensity are briefly mentioned; and the sample size,
selection criteria, and follow-up time vary greatly across studies.
Purpose The EFIBAR study aims to investigate over 1 year the effects of a 16-week supervised exercise program, initiated
immediately after bariatric surgery, on weight loss (primary outcome), body composition, cardiometabolic risk, physical fitness,
and quality of life in patients with severe/extreme obesity.
Material and Methods The EFIBAR study is a parallel-group, superiority, randomized controlled trial (RCT), comprising 80
surgery patients. Half of the participants, randomly selected, perform a 16-week supervised exercise program, including both
strength and aerobic training, starting immediately after the surgery (7–14 days). For each participant, all primary and secondary
outcomes are measured at three different time points: (i) before the surgery, (ii) after the intervention (≈4 months), and (iii) 1 year
after the surgery.