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Fasted Evening Exercise: Performance and Compensatory Eating

N

Nottingham Trent University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Obesity

Treatments

Behavioral: Fed Evening Exercise
Behavioral: Fasted Evening Exercise
Behavioral: Fed Morning Exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04742530
TS_FastEvEx_2021

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study will compare the appetite, energy intake, and exercise performance responses to a bout of exercise completed in the evening after an extended period of fasting with a similar bout of exercise completed in the evening and the morning, after consuming a carbohydrate-containing meal.

Full description

Regular exercise is known to be a successful strategy for improving several facets of health and maintaining body weight. However, many people are not engaging in enough exercise, and some may not be achieving maximum benefits from the exercise that they already do. Performing exercise in the overnight fasted state has been shown to reduce energy intake over the course of a single day, without any compensatory reductions in free-living energy expenditure. Despite these promising findings, it is likely that not every member of the population is logistically able to perform exercise in the morning due to various work, family and social commitments, and exercise in the evening may be a logical alternative for these individuals. Whether the beneficial effects of overnight fasted exercise can be observed at an alternative time of the day (i.e. the evening) is unknown.

Therefore, the investigators are interested in examining the compensatory appetite and energy intake responses following a bout of evening exercise performed after an extended (7 hour) period of fasting. Exercise performance will also be assessed as a marker of voluntary energy expenditure, which if reduced, has the potential to compensate for the reduced energy balance induced by fasted exercise.

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 40 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Non-smokers.
  • Have maintained a stable weight for 6 months (self-reported).
  • No history of gastric, digestive, cardiovascular or renal disease (self-reported).
  • Female specific: must be using a monophasic, low dose combined OCP (containing less than 50μg oestradiol and a synthetic progestin) OR females with regular menstrual cycles (self-reported).

Exclusion criteria

  • Have an unusual eating pattern (i.e., extended fasting periods >8h other than overnight - self-reported).
  • Severe food allergies, dislike or intolerance of study foods or drinks.
  • Currently undergoing a lifestyle intervention (structured diet or exercise)
  • Diagnosis of a condition or currently undergoing treatment therapy known to affect glucose or lipid metabolism (e.g., type-2 diabetes, taking statins), or contraindications to exercise.
  • Use of medication or supplements that may affect hormone concentrations.
  • Excessive alcohol consumption (>14 units/week).
  • Intensive training schedule (>10 hours/week).
  • Having received a positive COVID-19 test in the 6-month period prior to participation.
  • Female specific: currently pregnant or breastfeeding, the use of any hormonal contraception, and the self-reporting of short (<24 d), long (>35 d), or irregular menstrual cycles.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

16 participants in 3 patient groups

Fasted Evening Exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise will take place in the evening, following a 7 hour period of fasting.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Fasted Evening Exercise
Fed Evening Exercise
Active Comparator group
Description:
Exercise will take place in the evening, after having consumed a carbohydrate-containing meal 2 hours prior.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Fed Evening Exercise
Fed Morning Exercise
Active Comparator group
Description:
Exercise will take place in the morning, after having consumed a carbohydrate-containing meal 2 hours prior.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Fed Morning Exercise

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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