Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

This study is a randomized crossover trail examining the effect of breakfast consumption or omission on afternoon resistance training performance. Resistance-trained adults will complete a resistance training workout comprised of barbell back squat, barbell bench press, and barbell conventional deadlift following either consuming breakfast and lunch, or the same amount of food consumed solely at lunch. For each testing session the participants will be provided with all food to consume prior to arriving at the laboratory. Major performance outcomes will be total repetition volume completed for each exercise (i.e. bench press, squat, and deadlift) and the entire workout (each individual trial), along with barbell kinematics for each exercise.


Clinical Trial Description

OVERVIEW This study is a randomized crossover trail examining the effect of breakfast consumption or omission on afternoon resistance training performance. Resistance-trained adults will complete a resistance training workout comprised of barbell back squat, barbell bench press, and barbell conventional deadlift following either consuming breakfast and lunch, or the same amount of food consumed solely at lunch. For each testing session the participants will be provided with all food to consume prior to arriving at the laboratory. Major performance outcomes will be total repetition volume completed for each exercise (i.e. bench press, squat, and deadlift) and the entire workout (each individual trial), along with barbell kinematics for each exercise. Participants will report to the laboratory on three separate occasions, with 3 to 10 days between each visit. At the first visit, after initial screening and provision of informed consent, each participant will undergo a performance screening and familiarization session to confirm eligibility and become accustomed to the study procedures. This familiarization session will include initial assessments of bench press, barbell back squat, and conventional deadlift maximal strength in order to determine final eligibility. Additionally, body composition will be assessed via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry and digital anthropometry at this session for descriptive purposes. Following the familiarization session, each participant will complete two laboratory visits consisting of completion of the resistance training workout described below after consuming the provided meals either divided between breakfast and lunch (~3-4 hours after breakfast), or solely at lunch. This will ensure each participant consumes identical quantities and types of foods prior to both exercise sessions. Thus, the only difference will be the food distribution as two meals (breakfast and lunch) or one meal (lunch). Throughout the study, participants will be asked to maintain their normal lifestyle practices. In addition, participants will report their dietary intake during the 24-hour period prior to the first testing session and will be asked to replicate this intake during the 24-hour period prior to the subsequent testing sessions. A background questionnaire will also be completed to assess general supplement use. PURPOSE The purpose of this investigation is to examine the effect of breakfast consumption or omission on afternoon resistance training performance in habitual breakfast consumers and non-consumers. GENERAL HYPOTHESIS It is hypothesized that afternoon resistance training performance will be impaired in habitual breakfast consumers when breakfast is omitted, but similar decrements will not be observed in habitual non-consumers. HYPOTHESES TO BE TESTED/SPECIFIC AIMS Specific Aim 1. To determine the effect of breakfast consumption on afternoon resistance training performance. Hypothesis. It is hypothesized that afternoon resistance training performance will not be impacted by breakfast consumption or omission when the cohort is examined as a whole. Specific Aim 2. To determine whether habitual breakfast consumption patterns impact afternoon resistance training performance following consumption or omission of breakfast. Hypothesis. It is hypothesized that habitual breakfast consumption patterns will impact the effect of breakfast consumption on resistance training performance. More specifically, performance will be negatively affected by the omission of breakfast in those who habitually consume breakfast. Yet the omission of breakfast will not negatively impact resistance training performance in those that regularly do not consume breakfast. Specific Aim 3. To determine the impact of breakfast consumption on subjective responses throughout an afternoon resistance training session. Hypothesis. It is hypothesized that subjective responses during afternoon resistance training will not be impacted by breakfast consumption or omission when the cohort is examined as a whole. Specific Aim 4. To determine whether habitual breakfast consumption patterns influence subjective responses throughout an afternoon resistance training session, following consumption or omission of breakfast. Hypothesis. It is hypothesized that worsened subjective responses will be observed after breakfast omission only in those who habitually consume breakfast. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT05120440
Study type Interventional
Source Texas Tech University
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 17, 2021
Completion date May 16, 2022

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT05987046 - Contrast Training, Post-activation Countermovement Jump Performance in High Strength Male N/A
Completed NCT04136821 - The Long-term Effects of Oceanix™ on Resistance Training Adaptations N/A
Recruiting NCT05945641 - Effect of Low-load Resistance Training vs. High-intensity Interval Training on Local Muscle Endurance N/A
Completed NCT04069351 - Body Composition Changes During Overfeeding Plus Resistance Training N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT06360536 - Remotely Delivered Resistance Training for Cardiometabolic Health Among Black Women N/A
Completed NCT04535596 - Blood Flow Restriction Exercises and Conservative Exercises in Knee Osteoarthritis N/A
Completed NCT04213586 - Effects of Whey Protein and Collagen Supplementation N/A
Completed NCT05052164 - Improvement Of Physical And Physiological Parameters In Menopausal Or Post-Menopausal Celiac Women N/A
Completed NCT04630951 - Blood Flow Restriction Strength Training in Professional Soccer Players N/A
Not yet recruiting NCT03722277 - Variable Resistance Training in Patients With Osteoarthrosis of the Knee N/A
Completed NCT00991523 - Overnight Post-Exercise Recovery After Protein Ingestion Prior to Sleep N/A
Completed NCT01216722 - Study of Resistance Strengthening Versus Ambulation Post-Liver Transplant N/A
Recruiting NCT06240962 - Mindfulness Practice vs Strength Training on Pain, Kinesiophobia and Function Among Sprinters N/A
Recruiting NCT06131138 - Aquatic Exercises VS Core Strengthening on Disability, Flexibility and Postural Stability in Weightlifters. N/A
Recruiting NCT06131125 - Plyometric vs Explosive Strength Training on Agility, Power, and Balance in Basketball Players N/A
Recruiting NCT06131047 - High Intensity Resistance Training With and Without Blood Flow Restriction in ACL Reconstruction N/A
Completed NCT04315077 - The Short Term Effects of Oceanix Supplementation on Recovery N/A
Completed NCT05597423 - Massage as Recovery Strategy After Resistance Training N/A
Completed NCT02327975 - Prescription of Physical Exercise Through Mobile Application in Elderly N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06171841 - Effects of Low-Intensity Blood Flow Restriction Training in Normoxia and Hypoxia Conditions N/A