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Investigating the Inverted-U Relationship Between Cognitive Performance and Plasma Epinephrine

N

National Taiwan Normal University

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Healthy Young Adults

Treatments

Behavioral: Resistance exercise

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05407259
202205HM003

Details and patient eligibility

About

Abstract Although acute resistance exercise has been suggested to enhance inhibitory control, a critical component of executive function, the mechanism by which acute exercise influences inhibitory control is unclear and there are methodological limitations in previous empirical studies. According to the locus coeruleus-norepinephrine (LC-NE) theory, the activity of the LC, the major releaser of NE in the brain, regulates inhibitory control. Because there is reciprocal communication between circulating epinephrine and the LC. Plasma epinephrine is chosen as the index of LC-NE activity. However, only one study in acute exercise-inhibitory control measured the plasma epinephrine. Therefore, this registered report aims to extend its findings by a four-arm crossover randomized controlled design with three different intensities, using free-weight, multiple-joint, and structural resistance exercises. Moreover, most studies showed some methodological limitations such as failing to report the process of randomization, implementing a familiarization of resistance exercise before the maximal strength test, and publishing the protocol. Without a transparent report on how the participants were allocated, the results were at risk of bias. Without a familiarization of resistance exercise, the maximal muscle strength was likely to be underestimated. Without publishing the protocol before data collection, these findings were threatened by undetected researchers' degrees of freedom such as HARKing (hypothesizing after the results are known), cherry picking, and p-hacking. This registered report will address the limitations of previous studies by incorporating cognitive and resistance exercise familiarization, transparently reporting the randomization process, and submitting it as a registered report.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

20 to 40 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. healthy young male aged 18-40 years;
  2. recreational resistance-trained (≥ 1 time/week for the previous 6 months);
  3. free from cardiovascular, cerebrovascular, and neurological disorders and other chronic diseases;
  4. free from any medical condition listed on the 2014 update of the Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR-Q+);
  5. non-smoker; and
  6. normal or corrected-to-normal vision.

Exclusion criteria

  1. athlete trained in a competitive sports team or engaging in exercise for more than 20 hours/week;
  2. unable to perform any of the intervention exercises (barbell squat, press, and deadlift); or
  3. color blind

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 4 patient groups

Control condition
No Intervention group
Description:
During the control condition, participants will be asked to read a book related to exercise for approximately 40 minutes.
Low-intensity barbell resistance exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise: Barbell squat, barbell press, and barbell deadlift Number of sets: 3 Number of repetitions: 5 Intensity: 65% 1RM Training method: Circuit training (Squat set 1 ➔ Press set 1 ➔ Deadlift set 1 ➔ Squat set 2 ➔ Press set 2 ➔ Deadlift set 2 ➔ Squat set 3 ➔ Press set 3 ➔ Deadlift set 3) Rest interval between exercises and sets: \~3 minutes (Warm-up: 1 set of 5 repetitions for each exercise at 50% 1RM)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Resistance exercise
Moderate-intensity barbell resistance exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise: Barbell squat, barbell press, and barbell deadlift Number of sets: 3 Number of repetitions: 5 Intensity: 72% 1RM Training method: Circuit training (Squat set 1 ➔ Press set 1 ➔ Deadlift set 1 ➔ Squat set 2 ➔ Press set 2 ➔ Deadlift set 2 ➔ Squat set 3 ➔ Press set 3 ➔ Deadlift set 3) Rest interval between exercises and sets: \~3 minutes (Warm-up: 1 set of 5 repetitions for each exercise at 50% 1RM)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Resistance exercise
High-intensity barbell resistance exercise
Experimental group
Description:
Exercise: Barbell squat, barbell press, and barbell deadlift Number of sets: 3 Number of repetitions: 5 Intensity: 78% 1RM Training method: Circuit training (Squat set 1 ➔ Press set 1 ➔ Deadlift set 1 ➔ Squat set 2 ➔ Press set 2 ➔ Deadlift set 2 ➔ Squat set 3 ➔ Press set 3 ➔ Deadlift set 3) Rest interval between exercises and sets: \~3 minutes (Warm-up: 1 set of 5 repetitions for each exercise at 50% 1RM)
Treatment:
Behavioral: Resistance exercise

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Ting-Yu Lin, B.A.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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