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"We Walk": Impact of Exercise Dose on Health Outcomes Among Women Ages 60-75

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Condition
Interventions
Behavioral: High Dosage
Behavioral: Low Dosage
Registration Number
NCT01722136
Lead Sponsor
University of South Carolina
Brief Summary

The overall goal is to determine whether any energy expenditure compensation in response to 16 weeks of aerobic exercise at a higher-dose is greater compared to a lower-dose intervention in older women, and to begin to investigate underlying physiological mechanisms that influence energy expenditure changes in older women.

Detailed Description

The overall goal is to determine whether any energy expenditure compensation in response to 16 weeks of aerobic exercise at a higher-dose is greater compared to a lower-dose intervention in older women, and to begin to investigate underlying physiological mechanisms that influence energy expenditure changes in older women. Changes in all components of energy expenditure, as well as concentrations of plasma leptin and serum free T3, in response to the two different exercise programs (14 and 8 kcal/kg body weight weekly, 60-65% VO2max, 4 days/wk) will be compared in older, non-obese women (60-75 yrs, BMI=18-30 kg/m2).

Specific Aim 1: To determine whether differential changes in total daily energy expenditure and its components occur in older women in response to two exercise programs of different doses. State-of-the-art methods will be used (total daily energy expenditure by doubly labeled water; non-exercise activity thermogenesis using Physical Activity Monitoring System; resting metabolic rate and thermic effect of food via indirect calorimetry).

Primary Hypothesis: Due to a greater decline in NEAT, women will exhibit a smaller increase in total daily energy expenditure in response to the higher-dose, compared to the lower-dose, exercise program, despite greater increases in resting metabolic rate and thermic effect of food.

Specific Aim 2: To explore whether differential changes occur in plasma leptin and serum free triiodo-L-thyronine (free T3) concentrations in older women in response to 16-week aerobic exercise programs of two different doses.

We hypothesize that in response to the higher-dose exercise program, women will exhibit larger decreases in plasma leptin and serum free T3 concentrations, compared to the lower-dose exercise program.

We will also determine whether women exhibit greater improvements in plasma lipids, insulin sensitivity (using homeostasis model assessment, HOMA, score), blood pressure, and aerobic fitness in response to the higher-dose, compared to the lower-dose, exercise program.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
72
Inclusion Criteria
  • BMI 18-30
  • Sedentary (exercising less than 20 minutes no more than 3 times per week)
  • Non-smoking
  • Weight stable (+/- 5%) over past 3 months
Exclusion Criteria
  • Self-reported cardiovascular disease
  • Additional self-reported medical conditions
  • Medications known to affect metabolism
  • Excess caffeine use
  • Self-reported contradictions according to ACSM
  • Unwillingness to provide informed consent

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
High DosageHigh DosageExercise dose 14kcal/kg/week
Low DosageLow DosageExercise dose of 8kcal/kg/week
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change from baseline total daily energy expenditure and its components (resting metabolic rate, thermic effect of food, non-exercise activity thermogenesis)in 4 monthsBaseline (pre-intervention); 4 months (post-intervention)
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change from baseline plasma leptin and serum free triiodo-L-thyronine (free T3) concentrations in 4 monthsBaseline (pre-intervention); 4 month (post-intervention)

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Public Health Research Center University of South Carolina

🇺🇸

Columbia, South Carolina, United States

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