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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Recruiting

Administrative data

NCT number NCT05343611
Other study ID # JPI- ERAHDL
Secondary ID
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date May 1, 2022
Est. completion date December 30, 2024

Study information

Verified date June 2023
Source Universita di Verona
Contact Roberto Modena, PhD
Phone 00390464483508
Email roberto.modena@univr.it
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

We hypothesize that the antioxidant and cytoprotective functions of vitamin E combined with the cortisol-lowering effect of chocolate polyphenols and physical activity may help prevent the age-dependent decline of mitochondrial function and nutrient metabolism in skeletal muscle, key underpinning events in protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) and muscle wasting in the elderly. To test this hypothesis, a vitamin E functionalized dark chocolate rich in polyphenols will be developed with the collaboration of Nestlè Company, and its effects will be investigated combined with physical activity in a 6-month randomized case-control trial on pre-dementia elderly patients, a well-defined population of subjects at risk of undernutrition and frailty. Subjects stabilized on a protein-rich diet (0.9-1.0 g protein/Kg ideal body weight/day) and physical exercise program (High Intensity Interval Training specifically developed for these subjects), will be randomized in 3 groups (n = 34 each): controls (Group A) will maintain the baseline diet and cases will receive either 30 g/day of dark chocolate containing 500 mg total polyphenols (corresponding to 60 mg epicatechin) and 100 mg vitamin E (as RRR-alpha-tocopherol) (Group B) or the high polyphenol chocolate without additional vitamin E (Group C). Diet will be isocaloric and with the same intake of polyphenols and vitamin E in the 3 groups. Muscle mass will be the primary endpoint and other clinical endpoints will include neurocognitive status and previously identified biomolecular indices of frailty in pre-dementia patients. Muscle biopsies will be collected to assess myocyte contraction and mitochondrial metabolism. Laboratory endpoints will include the nutritional compliance to the proposed intervention (blood polyphenols and vitamin E status and metabolism), 24-h salivary cortisol, steroid hormones and IGF-1, and molecular indices of inflammation, oxidant stress, cell death and autophagy. These parameters will be investigated in muscle and blood cells by state-of-the-art omics techniques. Molecular and nutritional findings will also be confirmed in vitro using skeletal myotubes, blood leukocytes and neural cell lines. Clinical and laboratory results will be processed by a dedicated bioinformatics platform (developed with the external collaboration of the omics company Molecular Horizon Srl) to interpret the molecular response to the nutritional intervention and to personalize its application.


Description:

BACKGROUND Older adults are particularly vulnerable to undernutrition, a state resulting from defective food intake or uptake (nutrient deficiencies) leading to altered body composition and weight loss. Muscle wasting is a major drawback of this condition and a symptom of protein-energy malnutrition (PEM) and metabolic reprogramming of tissues that increase the ageing process. These changes sustain insulin resistance and impaired mitochondrial metabolism of critical organs and tissues, including skeletal muscle. Prevention of undernutrition is critical. Undernutrition correlates with an accelerated and general decline in health conditions (worsening both physical and cognitive/mental aspects), thus increasing the risk of frailty and finally accelerating physical and cognitive decline. Under these circumstances, the majority of people experience a significant loss of locomotor function, with a significant decline in quality of life, and a high risk of falls which often represents the terminal event in life. These factors can lower the frailty threshold for the oldest-old, with the consequent loss of adaptability, which is an essential feature of successful ageing. This process of deteriorating mobility is multifactorial and also includes decline in cognitive function, increased bone fragility, and reduced joint flexibility. Strong evidence suggests that ageing and cognitive decline are associated with dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (HPA axis), with a clear increase in cortisol levels. The effects of hypercortisolism are far-reaching, affecting the skeletal muscle widely, thus leading to significant sarcopenia and fragility. It is well known that HPA axis activity is impaired in Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients. This dysregulation induces an increase in cortisol levels. High levels of cortisol, one of the most catabolic hormones, also lead to noticeable sarcopenia. Mechanistic aspects include antagonistic effects on the insulin axis (secondary insulin resistance) and consequent metabolic reprogramming of tissues to gluconeogenesis sustained by non-carbohydrate precursors that include amino acids derived from the proteolytic degradation of muscle proteins. Comorbidity in frail people can further sustain the secretion and metabolic effects of cortisol, especially undernutrition and PEM. Some of us previously showed that cortisol levels are significantly higher in patients with AD and severity of the behavioural symptoms, and more importantly, changes in body mass, significantly correlated with cortisol levels. Therefore, cortisol levels, which are not regularly evaluated in AD patients, would help predict patients at risk of weight loss. Moreover, recent findings revealed a significant decrease in cortisol levels in response to chronic physical activity in healthy individuals and patients with dementia. Physical activity treatment (PT) is a non-pharmacological treatment with great potential to attenuate the cognitive decline in healthy elderly. In patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) it was observed that 6 months of PT significantly ameliorates BMI, 6' Walking Test (6MWT), systolic and diastolic blood pressure, glucose, cholesterol, and triglycerides. Importantly, PT may preferably be undertaken as high aerobic intensity (85-95% of maximal heart rate) intervals (HIT), as this yields superior effects on the cardiovascular system compared with PT of moderate or low intensity. HIT has successfully been applied in older individuals (8,9), and in frail populations such as patients with heart failure. Along with physical activity, macro and micronutrients, are reported to interact with the activity of HPA-axis and to help reducing cortisol levels. Chocolate polyphenols appear to have significant effects with impact on both mental well-being and metabo-inflammatory symptoms of chronic exposure to such stress hormone (3,11-13). Cocoa-derived flavonoids can lower the levels of the active hormone cortisol. Mechanistically, these natural molecules inhibit 11β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (11β-HSD) type 1, an enzyme involved in reducing cortisone to the active form cortisol. The intake of these and many other micronutrients and homeostatic factors decrease with aging due to general worsening of quantity and quality of food intake. Together with micronutrients, protein intake is a critical aspect and a major risk factor for PEM and frailty. Nutritional supplementation for frail people has been shown to slow their functional decline, improving both muscle mass and strength, particularly if this is combined with physical activity. It is now established that nutritional recommendations, including adequate protein and micronutrient intake, are important for a better quality of life in the elderly, which is common management approach of older people who are frail or at risk for developing frailty. Vitamin E is a fat-soluble essential micronutrient with unique properties as antioxidant and cell protection factor. It is present in cellular membranes of all tissues to scavenge peroxyl radicals formed by free radical attack on polyunsaturated fatty acids. This function is particularly important to prevent mitochondrial damage and the uncontrolled release of free radicals from these organelles in the muscle. Its intake and function as cell protection factor and immune system modulator can be compromised in the elderly (20); moreover, preclinical and human experimental studies show that vitamin E positively influences myoblast proliferation, differentiation, survival, membrane repair, mitochondrial efficiency, muscle mass, muscle contractile properties, and exercise capacity. Furthermore, recent studies on the human metabolism of vitamin E demonstrated that the biotransformation of this vitamin in human tissues forms bioavailable long-chain metabolites with a role as tissue detoxification (PXR and PPAR-gamma agonist activity) and anti-inflammatory (LOX-5 inhibition) mediators. Therefore, for multiple reasons, vitamin E supplementation in the diet as a measure to support physical training in preventing age-associated PEM is worth investigating. AIMS The study aims to investigate if regular consumption of vitamin E-functionalized and polyphenol-rich chocolate can support physical exercise high-protein diet to slow down the progression of protein-energy undernutrition in pre-dementia elderly people. Specifically, the primary aim is to investigate whether regular consumption of vitamin E-functionalized and polyphenol-rich chocolate and regular exercise practice boost lower limb muscle mass in pre-dementia elderly people. The secondary aims are to investigate the effect of regular consumption of vitamin E-functionalized and polyphenol-rich chocolate and regular exercise practice on muscle strength, cognitive function, vascular function, metabolic and physical functions, as well as mitochondrial respiration, circadian cortisol curve, blood hormones, and inflammatory status in blood and mRNA in pre-dementia elderly people. PROCEDURE The study will be a randomized, double blinded, controlled trial with parallel groups including active control and shame groups. One hundred and fifty individuals with MCI and subjective cognitive decline without functional deficits will be screened for eligibility and those that comply with inclusion and exclusion criteria will be confirmed and the informed consent will be allocated for testing and undergo preliminary evaluations (T00). After preliminary evaluation, all the individuals included in the study will undergo a 4 to 6-week "Run-in" phase during which the high protein diet (HPro) will be introduced and all subjects will be trained to implement the High-Intensity Training physical exercise (HIT) program that will be developed during the study. Immediately after the "Run-in", a pre-intervention (T0) evaluation will be undertaken. Consequently, participants stabilized on the HPro Diet + HIT which will be the common treatment for all participants, will be randomly assigned (utilizing an online statistical computing web program) to one of the three arms of the nutritional intervention in which the effect of vitamin E (VE) will be investigated separate or combined with the effect of chocolate polyphenols (HPP) compared to control treatment. The intervention will last six months; assessments will be performed after three months (halfway through the intervention) and at the end of the intervention (T1 and T2, respectively). A follow-up assessment will be performed three months after the end of the intervention after the restoration of baseline diet and physical activity conditions (T3). Each group will include 34 participants; a 20% dropout has been estimated based on previous studies. SAMPLE SIZE CALCULATION Considering an alpha = 0.05, a power = 0.8 and the 20% of estimated drop out, we aim to recruit 102 subjects (34 in each group). Main outcome is "muscle mass", and for all the groups treatment duration will be 6 months. In 6 months in the target population the loss of muscle mass is assumed to be 1.0-1.5% (+/- 0.5%) [5] [48]. In Control group (Group A), which includes people undergoing targeted exercise, the expected increase is 2% 1.5% (+-0.5%) [5] [48]. In treatment groups (Groups B and C) the median average expected increase at second follow-up is 4% 2% (+-0.5%), and 1.5% 4% (+-0.5%) at 6 months [6] [49]. The rate of lost at follow-up, derived from previous studies, is 20% (+-2%) [7] [50]. Correlation between repeated measures is assumed to be 0.5, variance explained by the between-subjects effect 6.25 and error variance 65. All estimates were performed using Stata v.16.1 (StataCorp LP, College Station, TX, USA) by "power repeated" command. STATISTICAL ANALYSIS Statistical analysis will be conducted under the supervision of an expert in biostatistics (dr Gili, at Coordinator Unit) and with the support of LIPOSTAR software provided by external collaborator C2. A two-way repeated measures ANOVA, including age and gender as covariates, with "time" as within-group factor and "treatment" as between-groups factor will be utilized to calculate difference between groups. In the presence of significant effects, a multiple comparisons tests with Bonferroni's correction will be performed. The familywise alpha level for significance will be set at 0.05 (two-tails), with Bonferroni's correction when needed, for all the analyses. SIDE EFFECTS Sides effects may be related to the assessment procedures: strength, voluntary activation, and electrically evoked potential tests may cause muscle soreness and discomfort during the procedures. In case of persistent discomfort the procedure will be immediately stopped. Also, side effect might be caused by blood draw and muscle biopsy: subjects may experience some side effects related to the blood draw in the draw site, which normally gets between the following days. Also, subjects may experience some soreness in the site of the biopsy, muscle tightness and fatigue in the few days after biopsy was taken. In the case of these events, subject will be monitored and the family doctor will be informed. DATA AND SAFETY MONITORING COMMITTEE A log-diary will be kept by each participant and will be checked weekly by the investigators and collaborators. In the diary participants will include information about possible adverse events caused by assessment procedures or related to the diet and training, any important points about the response to the interventions, any possible discomfort experienced during or after the training, or notes regarding diet and supplementation. Prof. Gianluca-Svegliati Baroni of the Gastroenterology Division of the University Hospital of Ancona, Italy will serve as external scientific supervisor of the clinical trial. He is an expert in clinical and preclinical studies of human nutrition and metabolism. He will advise on specific Code: CHOKO-AGE Data: 10/06/2021 Version:1 30 tasks and monitor the different phases of clinical trial from organization to implementation of activities, data gathering and evaluation/interpretation. The quality assurance standards of University of Verona will be adopted to monitor the clinical trial. A delegate of this University will be nominated to perform the monitoring of the different phases of the trial utilizing internal SOPs. The entire set of clinical procedures, operator's activity and collection of experimental data will be verified during a series of visits by the monitor that will occur at the beginning and the end of each time point in the study (Time T00 to T3).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Recruiting
Enrollment 102
Est. completion date December 30, 2024
Est. primary completion date December 30, 2024
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 65 Years to 75 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - Presence of Mild Cognitive Impairment or Mild Dementia. Recruited individuals will be assessed by means of Neuropsychological tests (Mini Mental State Examination, evaluations criteria from Diagnostic and Statistical Manual for Mental Disorder-5) which will be performed by an expert Neuropsychologist Exclusion Criteria: - Presence of kidney or liver failure, or any other liver or kidney disease; - Presence of gastro-intestinal disorders (i.e. irritable bowel syndrome); - Presence of food intolerance; - Presence of heart failure, angina, pulmonary disease, cancer and cancer-related cachexia; - Presence of coagulation disorders; - Addictive or previous addictive behaviour, defined as the abuse of cannabis, opioids or other drugs, carrier of infectious diseases; - Presence of musculoskeletal diseases; - Suffering from mental illness, inability to cooperate; - Suffering from known cardiac conditions (e.g. pacemakers, arrhythmias, and cardiac conduction disturbances) or peripheral neuropathy; - Regular users of any proton pump inhibitors (e.g., omeprazole, lansoprazole, pantoprazole), antibiotics, anticoagulant medication or antiplatelet medications in high dose (es: acetylsalicylic acid >200mg x day); - Mini Mental State (MMSE): results >= 10 points

Study Design


Intervention

Behavioral:
Combination of High Protein Diet and Physical Exercise protocol
A high Protein Diet (HPro) will be provided to maintain individual caloric endpoint and to adjust protein intake to 0.9-1.0 g/Kg ideal body weight. Each participant will receive a tailored diet (taking into account personal preference) which will follow common general guidelines. Servings of food high in polyphenols will be limited to one per day. Physical exercise will be undertaken three times each week for about 50 minutes per session. The intervention will consist of both aerobic and strength training exercises. Aerobic exercise will consist of walking on a treadmill with 4 x 4 minutes at (85-95% of HRmax), interrupted by 3-minute active recovery periods (60-70% of HRmax). Strength exercise consists of maximal strength training, using a seated leg press with 4 sets of 4 repetitions at ~90% of maximal strength (1RM). Rest periods between the sets will be 3-4 min.
Dietary Supplement:
HPP Choko
Participants add to their diet with 30 g/day of 85% dark chocolate high in polyphenols
HPP/VE Choko
Participants add to their diet 30 grams of 85% dark chocolate high in polyphenols, functionalized with 100 mg of Vitamin E per day.

Locations

Country Name City State
Italy Fondazione Mons. A. Mazzali ONLUS Mantova
Italy Clinica Pederzoli Peschiera Del Garda Verona
Italy CeRiSM (Sport Mountain and Health Research Center) Rovereto Trento
Italy University of Verona Verona

Sponsors (7)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Massimo Venturelli, PhD INCLIVA, Molde University College, Molecular Horizon S.r.l., Nestlé Italiana S.p.A., University of Liverpool, University Of Perugia

Country where clinical trial is conducted

Italy, 

References & Publications (25)

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Tsang C, Hodgson L, Bussu A, Farhat G, Al-Dujaili E. Effect of Polyphenol-Rich Dark Chocolate on Salivary Cortisol and Mood in Adults. Antioxidants (Basel). 2019 May 29;8(6):149. doi: 10.3390/antiox8060149. — View Citation

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Venturelli M, Sollima A, Ce E, Limonta E, Bisconti AV, Brasioli A, Muti E, Esposito F. Effectiveness of Exercise- and Cognitive-Based Treatments on Salivary Cortisol Levels and Sundowning Syndrome Symptoms in Patients with Alzheimer's Disease. J Alzheimers Dis. 2016 Jul 14;53(4):1631-40. doi: 10.3233/JAD-160392. — View Citation

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Wisloff U, Stoylen A, Loennechen JP, Bruvold M, Rognmo O, Haram PM, Tjonna AE, Helgerud J, Slordahl SA, Lee SJ, Videm V, Bye A, Smith GL, Najjar SM, Ellingsen O, Skjaerpe T. Superior cardiovascular effect of aerobic interval training versus moderate continuous training in heart failure patients: a randomized study. Circulation. 2007 Jun 19;115(24):3086-94. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.106.675041. Epub 2007 Jun 4. — View Citation

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* Note: There are 25 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in free-fat soft tissue mass (g) Change in free-fat soft tissue mass, (FFSTM, g), will be assessed by means of a whole-body scan on a dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry scanner. Values at the regional level (upper limbs, lower limbs and trunk) will be also considered. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in Quadriceps volume and cross-sectional area Quadriceps volume and cross-sectional area (CSA) will be measured by using ultrasound method. All ultrasound images will be acquired by an expert operator with the same ultrasound device throughout the whole study using a linear 50 mm transducer.
Participants will be asked to lie prone on a bed and rest with extended knee, and to relax completely during image acquisition. Five minutes of rest in this position will be provided for body fluid shift stabilization.
For the panoramic ultrasound scans, the region of interest (ROI) will be determined and marked.
The transducer will be kept in contact with the guide throughout the whole acquisition of CSAs, thus we ensured that the right CSA path was followed while keeping the transducer perpendicular to the skin.
Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the torque (Nm) and rate of torque development (Nm/s) of quadriceps during Maximal Voluntary Activation and electrically evoked potential Maximal voluntary and electrically evoked muscle contractions of the quadriceps muscle of the dominant leg will be measured utilizing a custom-made setup.
The torque (Nm) and rate of torque development (Nm/s) during a maximum voluntary contraction and a tetanic stimulation will be compared in order to estimate the role of central command flow to the muscle in changing the efficiency of the tension development at the tendon.
Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the one repetition maximum load (kg) Maximal strength will be obtained as 1- repetition maximum (1RM) in the squat exercise machine (Leg press) 1RM will be recorded as the heaviest lifted load, in kilograms, achieved within 4-8 lifts, applying rest periods of ~4 min and increments of 5 kg between each trial until failure Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the Rate of Force Development (N/s) Immediately after the 1RM test, using the same apparatus, the Rate of force development (N/s) and peak force (N) will be assessed using a force platform and applying a load corresponding to 75% of the participant's pre-test 1RM. Analyses of early and late phase RFD may provide useful information on the relative neural and muscular contribution, respectively, to the muscle force development Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in submaximal and maximal oxygen consumption (ml/kg/min) Individuals will perform a 3-speed walking test, on a treadmill. First, the subjects will be asked to stand in resting condition for 2 minutes meanwhile the resting oxygen uptake will be recorded. Then they will be asked to walk three 5-minute bouts of walking at 80%, 100%, and 120% self-selected speed respectively. Oxygen consumption (ml/kg/min) at these three speeds will be considered for the analysis.
Continuously progressing from the submaximal test, maximal oxygen consumption (ml/kg/min) will be measured during a ramped protocol exercise test employing increments every minute to exhaustion.
Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in Mini-Mental State Examination score (points) The global cognitive functioning will be assessed by means of Mini-Mental State Examination by an expert Neuropsychologist Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the Flow-mediated dilation (%) The brachial artery will be imaged using a high-resolution ultrasound Doppler system. After baseline brachial artery imaging (basal measurement), a blood pressure cuff will be placed around the forearm and inflated to 250 mmHg for 5 min. Brachial artery images and blood velocity will be obtained continuously 30s before and 2 min after cuff release. Flow-mediated dilation will be calculated as a percentage change of the peak diameter in response to reactive hyperemia in relation to the baseline diameter. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the Blood flow delta peak (ml/min) during a Single Passive-Leg Movement test The Single Passive-Leg Movement protocol consists of 30s of resting baseline femoral blood flow data collection, followed by 1 single passive knee flexion and extension with the same measure for the following 60s. Blood mean velocity (Vmean) will be analyzed with 1Hz resolution on the Doppler ultrasound system for 30s at rest and second by second for the 60s following the single passive movement. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the Pulse Wave Velocity (m/s) Ultrasound Doppler measurements will be taken at the carotid, common femoral artery and brachial artery, to assess peripheral arterial stiffness. PWV will be calculated. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in distance (meters) during the 6-minute walking test During the 6-minute walking test, a person has to walk as fast as possible over 6 minutes. The distance (meters) covered in 6 minutes will be recorded. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in time (min) during the Time-up and go test (TUG) The individual will be asked to sit on a chair and at the word "Go" they have to stand up, walk to a 3-meter away marker, turn around it and walk back to the chair and sit down again. This trial will be repeated 3 times and the best score (time) will be recorded. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in score (number of raises) during the 30 seconds Chair-stand test The individual will be asked to sit on a chair, to keep each hand on the opposite shoulder crossed at the wrists. When the test will start, individuals will be asked to rise to a full standing position and then sit back down again, repeating this movement for 30 seconds. The score will be the number of rises done in 30 seconds. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Changes in Circadian Cortisol curve (levels at 4 specific time throughout a day, ng/mL) Salivary cortisol will be measured using plain Sarstedt Salivette collection devices (Nürmbrecht, Germany). Immediately after sample collection, the Salivette tubes will be centrifuged for 2 minutes at 1000 rpm and stored at -80°C until analysis. Cortisol levels will be determined by a time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay.
To assess the circadian cortisol curve the samples will be taken at 7 am, 11 am, 3 pm and 8 pm.
Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Acute Cortisol response to the exercise (delta percentage between before and after a training session, %) Cortisol acute response to exercise will be derived from salivary cortisol collected right before and right after a single exercise session. Salivary cortisol will be measured using plain Sarstedt Salivette collection devices (Nürmbrecht, Germany). Immediately after sample collection, the Salivette tubes will be centrifuged for 2 minutes at 1000 rpm and stored at -80°C until analysis. Cortisol levels will be determined by a time-resolved fluorescence immunoassay. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in IL-6 (pg/mL) and IGF-1 (ng/mL) concentrations. From a blood sample, 100 microlitres of plasma will be obtained with EDTA as anticoagulant, and will be stored at -80ºC until analysis. IL-6 and IGF1 concentration will be measured by a specific Elisa kit. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in malondialdehyde (MDA, µM) For the determination of lipid peroxidation (measured as malondialdehyde) by HPLC, we will use the method described by Wong et al. (1987). The thiobarbiturate-MDA adduct will be quantified and this gives an estimation of lipid peroxidation. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in mRNA expression RNA samples will be processed by following the specific platform protocols and the final results will be bioinformatically analysed. Expression analysis software and pipelines will be used to analyse the differential expression profiles of the selected genes. We will also analyse SUB-NETWORKS, this is to see the relationships that exist between the different transcripts to try and find common molecular pathways Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the microbiota composition Bacterial DNA will be extracted from faecal samples and then amplified and sequenced using a high-throughput next-generation sequencing (NGS) platform able to generate million short sequences (reads) per single run. Sequences will be then processed using a bioinformatic pipeline whose steps that can be summarized as follows: raw data collection, data cleaning, assembly, gene prediction, taxonomic annotation, gene and protein abundance estimation. Baseline (T00), Pre-intervention (T0) after 2-4 weeks, Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle histology and fibre typing After the biopsy, a portion of the muscle will be orientated transversely and immersed in an isopentane solution dipped in liquid nitrogen, and subsequently stored at - 80°C., For analysis they will be cut into 10 µm thick cryosections with a cryostat maintained at - 20°C and mounted on glass slides. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle mitochondrial respiration After the biopsy, the muscle fibre bundles will be transferred immediately into respirometer. Biopsy samples of 2-5 mg will be run in duplicate in the two chambers system calibrated. Respirometry will be performed at a chamber temperature of 37°C applying a substrate uncoupler-inhibitor titration (SUIT) protocol optimized for skeletal muscle fibers Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle In vitro force characteristics After the biopsy, fibre bundles of 4-6 mm in length and 0.5 mm in diameter will be dissected from the samples and immersed in skinning solution to which the non-ionic detergent Brij 58 had been added. Fiber bundles will then be placed in storage solution and maintained for 24h at 4°C, followed by storage and transport at -20°C. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle single fibre measurements A bundle of permeabilized fibers will be removed from storage solution and placed in relaxing solution on ice. One end of the fibre will be secured to a force transducer, the other end attached to the lever arm of a servomotor. The length of the fibre will be adjusted to obtain an average sarcomere length of 2.5- 2.6 um. Fibre crosssectional area will be measured and relaxed single fibers activated by first immersing them in a chamber containing a low- Ca2+ concentration pre-activating solution for 3 min and then immersing them in a chamber containing high-[Ca2+] activating solution. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle cytokine mRNA A portion of the frozen muscle sample will be thawed on ice. mRNA for a panel of pro-inflammatory cytokines will be examined by quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR). RNA will be isolated using standard Trizol® extraction method and purified using RNeasy clean-up kit; cDNA will be synthesised using iScript first strand kit from 1 µg of isolated RNA. The panel of cytokines to be examined will include CCL2, CCL5, CXCL1 and IL-6, and S29. Targets will be amplified from 1 µg of cDNA using SYBR Green master mix reagent and amplified using a Bio-Rad thermocycler. The threshold cycle for target genes of interest will be normalised to s29 and expressed as fold-change using the delta-delta ct (2-??ct) method. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle redox status Assessment of muscle redox status will be undertaken by analysis of the reduced and oxidised glutathione contents of the biopsy together with analysis of the redox status of mitochondria through analysis of the proportion of peroxiredoxin 3 in the oxidised form, and cytosol by analysis of the proportion of peroxiredoxin 2 in the oxidised form. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
Secondary Change in the muscle proteomics A portion of the frozen muscle will be thawed on ice and prepared for proteomic analysis as previously described. A global label-free proteomic approach will be used using an Ultimate 3000 RSLC nano system coupled to a QExactive mass spectrometer. Data analysis will be performed using Proteome Discover and Peaks7 software. Pre-intervention (T0), Mid-intervention (T1) after 3 months, Post-intervention (T2) after 3 months and Follow-up (T3) after 3 months
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