Physical Fitness Effect on the Different Oxidative Stress Measurements

NCT ID: NCT01296490

Last Updated: 2014-01-01

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

32 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2011-06-30

Study Completion Date

2012-05-31

Brief Summary

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Physical exercise has many benefits, although it might also have negative impact on the body, which changes in accordance with training level, length of workout, age of subject and their fitness level. These outcomes are governed by complex biological processes, from which Reactive Oxygen Substances (ROS) are considered the most prominent ones during exercise activity. These substances harm muscle activity, and might cause other health related damage by influencing other pathways that engage with free radicals. Excess of ROS, is expressed as Oxidative Stress (OS), pathogenic process activation and aging. With this in mind, it is important to remember that ROS are essential to the investigators bodies as well, especially in gene regulation. Thus they influence proteins that are important for proper muscle function and the immune system.

Physical exercise induces changes in low molecular weight antioxidants, and in antioxidant enzymes. According to results that were published in the literature, no universal conclusion can be made regarding physical exercise effect on antioxidants activity. These contradictions might be attributed to the difference between the methods that were used, and their quality.

Paradoxically, physical exercise has the same effect on ROS inducement in skeletal muscle fibers as does not using the muscles for a long period of time (especially as a result of handicap). It is well known that physical exercise effect oxidative stress and antioxidant. Due to the doubts that rise from the literature, the investigators think that it is important to test physical fitness effect on oxidative stress biological markers, using various high quality methods, on the same population.

The investigators will test healthy men, 20-35 years of age, none smokers with 6-24% fat, who do not take vitamins or supplements. The men will run on a treadmill for 10 minutes to exhaustion, and blood will be taken before the test, 5 minutes after the test, and an hour after the test (checking recovery).

Detailed Description

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Things the investigators will measure:

1. Filling out a physical fitness, and overall health form, that indicates all fitness activity in the past 3 years, and vitamins and supplements that are being taken.
2. Fat percentage
3. VO2 max
4. Oxidants and antioxidants activity: Super oxide dismutase, Catalase, GSH/GSSG, Glutathione peroxide, Glutathione reductase, LDL, conjugated dienes, Plasma malondialdehyde. Measurements will be taken before the test, 5 minutes after the test and an hour after the test.

Work plan:

50 men, at the ages of 20-35 will be recruited. The participants will fill out a form that indicates their physical activity in the past 3 years, as well as their vitamin and supplements intake.

The men will run on a treadmill for 10 minutes until exhaustion.

Blood will be drawn before, 5 minutes after and an hour after the test. Oxidative stress will be measured according to the following parameters:

* 10 ml of blood in citrate tube will be centrifuged and analyzed for: Super oxide dismutase, Catalase, GSH/GSSG, Glutathione peroxide, Glutathione reductase.
* 2 ml of blood with no coagulating factors will be centrifuged and analyzed for: LDL, conjugated dienes, Plasma malondialdehyde (TBARS).

Clinical research:

Participants will run on a treadmill for 10 minutes until exhaustion. The men will be divided into 5 groups according to their VO2 max, comparing the oxidants and antioxidants activity between the groups.

Checking the oxidative stress and VO2 dependency (VO2 is an index for physical fitness).

Age: 20-35 Sex: Men Inclusion criteria: Healthy men, 2-35 years of age, with 6-24% body fat. Exclusion criteria: Smokers, and people who use vitamins and supplements.

Conditions

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Oxidative Stress

Study Design

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Allocation Method

NA

Intervention Model

SINGLE_GROUP

Primary Study Purpose

BASIC_SCIENCE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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Stress test

The men will run on a treadmill for 10 minutes until exhaustion. Blood will be drawn before, 5 minutes after and an hour after the test.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Stress test

Intervention Type OTHER

Stress test while running on a treadmill until exhaustion for 8-12 minutes. Blood will be drawn before, 5 minutes after and an hour after the test.

Interventions

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Stress test

Stress test while running on a treadmill until exhaustion for 8-12 minutes. Blood will be drawn before, 5 minutes after and an hour after the test.

Intervention Type OTHER

Other Intervention Names

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blood test

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Healthy men
* 20-35 years of age, with 6-24% body fat.

Exclusion Criteria

* Smokers and subjects who use vitamins and supplements
Minimum Eligible Age

20 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

35 Years

Eligible Sex

MALE

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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Tel Aviv University

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

Wingate Institute

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Dr. Eyal Shargal

Director, Sports medicine and research center

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Dov Lichtenberg, PhD

Role: STUDY_CHAIR

Tel Aviv University

Locations

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Wingate Institute

Netanya, , Israel

Site Status

Countries

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Israel

Other Identifiers

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Wingate 05

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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