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Preoperative Walking Evaluation and Postoperative Outcome

The hypothesis is that physical activity is associated with a reduced risk of complications and death after surgery. Self-reporting of physical activity is prone to be unreliable. In order to obtain a better picture of patients' physical activity, we intend to investigate the association between the average number of s

Condition(s)General Surgery, Perioperative Medicine
StatusRecruiting
Study typeObservational
SummaryThe hypothesis is that physical activity is associated with a reduced risk of complications and death after surgery. Self-reporting of physical activity is prone to be unreliable. In order to obtain a better picture of patients' physical activity, we intend to investigate the association between the average number of steps and postoperative outcomes. Many other objective measures of physical activity are costly and time-consuming to perform; for example, exercise tests, extensive sampling, and longer questionnaires. The primary research question is: Do patients with a higher degree of physical activity, measured as the average number of steps recorded on the patient's mobile phone, have a reduced risk of peri/postoperative complications and death, measured as Days At Home alive at 30 days
Who can participateInclusion Criteria: Adult patients (equal to or over 18 years) undergoing elective non-cardiac surgery providing informed consent Exclusion Criteria: Patients that can not provide informed consent.
Ages18 Years
SexAll
Lead sponsorKarolinska Institutet
LocationsStockholm, Sweden
Start date2023-09-01
NCT IDNCT06023069
Official listinghttps://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06023069

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