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NCT06621368

Effect of Two Years of Resistance Training on Health Status in Postmenopausal Women: Longitudinal Study Active Aging.

Recruiting now NA Last updated 1 October 2024
What this trial tests

NA trial testing Exercise in Aging in 200 participants. Currently enrolling.

Timeline
23 November 2023
Primary endpoint
20 December 2025
23 November 2026

Quick facts

Lead sponsorUniversidade Estadual de Londrina
PhaseNA
StatusRecruiting now
Study typeINTERVENTIONAL
Allocationrandomized
Designparallel
Maskingnone
Primary purposeprevention
Enrollment200
Start date23 November 2023
Primary completion20 December 2025
Estimated completion23 November 2026
Sites1 location across Brazil

Drugs / interventions tested

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Universidade Estadual de Londrina — full company profile →

Who can join

60 and older, female only, with Aging. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

Aging is a natural process of the life cycle that can result in morphological, neuromuscular, metabolic, physiological, cognitive and behavioral changes that can compromise quality of life, autonomy, self-esteem, health and life expectancy, especially in the elderly. On the other hand, resistance training (RT) has been widely recommended for the elderly population, due to the numerous health benefits it brings, such as increased strength and muscle mass, reduced body fat, increased bone mineral content and density, and improved cardiometabolic profile, among others. However, the effectiveness of RT in attenuating or reversing the deleterious effects of aging has been analyzed by studies conducted, in most cases, over relatively short periods, i.e., eight to 24 weeks. Considering that recent investigations have demonstrated a wide variation in the adaptive responses to RT in this population, it is likely that many of these responses are time-dependent. Additionally, the influence of important mediators and moderators in this process, especially training intensity and volume, dietary habits, the presence or absence of diseases and degenerative processes that cause disability, and the use of polypharmaceuticals, has not yet been well established. Therefore, based on the Active Aging Longitudinal Study, a research project initiated in 2012, it is intend to analyze whether or not RT practice can produce positive and lasting adaptive responses on muscle strength, body composition, functional fitness, cognition, cardiometabolic biomarkers, and cardiac function in postmenopausal women, based on a randomized controlled clinical trial over a long period of time (two years). In addition, mediation and moderation analyses will be used to understand the real impact of RT on the outcomes to be analyzed.

Publications & conference data

No peer-reviewed publications indexed yet for this trial.

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Other trials of Exercise

Trials testing the same drug.

Other recruiting trials for Aging

Currently open trials in the same condition.

Other Universidade Estadual de Londrina trials

Trials by the same sponsor.

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Data sources for this page

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