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Clinical Trial Summary

The mechanism(s) by which dehydration (both intra- and extracellular) impairs performance are still poorly described. A loss of volume results in increased occurrence of orthostatic intolerance, including dizziness, fatigue, headaches and related symptoms with upright posture. Any of these symptoms can contribute to decreased performance in maneuvers performed in the upright posture, which includes many military tasks. Thus, loss of volume challenges the cardiovascular and blood pressure responses to systemic whole body endurance exercise, while osmolality is the stimulus for intracellular dehydration that may impair local muscle force production by impairing contractile function, neural signaling, or both. In this study, we will compare how both types of dehydration affect MSNA and CAC.

The results of this study will provide mechanistic insight for how dehydration (intra- or extracellular) impairs systemic whole body and local small muscle performance in vivo. This Basic Science study seeks to understand how volume and osmolality impact MSNA and CAC as a basis for improving potential countermeasures, such as a more optimally formulated rehydration beverage. Therefore, this study directly complements Task Area T10 (Hot Weather Operations and Hydration: Injury and Performance Optimization) and impacts virtually all 14 Military Operational Medicine Research Program Drivers.


Clinical Trial Description

Study Objectives and Hypotheses

Primary Objective

The primary objectives of this study are to understand the in vivo effects of dehydration on:

1. Sympathetic neural control of cardiovascular function (MSNA), and

2. Neuromuscular function (CAC) via the IT Test

The primary hypotheses of this study are:

1. Baseline MSNA, and MSNA responses to tilt, will be higher in response to extracellular dehydration due to larger intravascular volume losses and greater baroreceptor unloading.

2. Neuromuscular function (CAC) via the IT Test will a) be more impaired by intracellular dehydration (cell stress) and b) CAC will show a greater performance reduction than CAR because it reduces the emphasis placed on the voluntary portion of performance (i.e., MVC).

Ancillary Questions/Sub Studies

1. The collection of blood and urine before and after exercise-heat stress and dehydration provides an opportunity to measure and characterize cytokine and intestinal barrier integrity marker (I-FAB, claudin-3) responses (blood) and renal stress biomarkers (urine) in humans. This descriptive research 'sub-study' directly complements Task Area T10 (Hot Weather Operations and Hydration: Injury and Performance Optimization) near and mid-term research goals of identifying biomarkers of heat stress for protection against heat injury. There are no hypotheses associated with this sub-study.

2. The study of dehydration requires rehydration for recovery. Rehydration provides an opportunity for a novel comparison of renal water retention (urine volume) when consuming equal volumes of two different commercial beverages (Gatorade® or Enterade-S®). Unlike Gatorade®, which is a carbohydrate-based beverage containing electrolytes, Enterade-S® is an amino acid-based beverage containing electrolytes. We hypothesize that the unique formulation of Enterade-S® will improve the rate of fluid absorption and fluid retention compared to Gatorade® in both intracellular and extracellular dehydration trials. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT03263975
Study type Interventional
Source United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date October 31, 2014
Completion date December 1, 2017

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Recruiting NCT03596580 - Validation of a Screening Tool to Assess Dehydration in Hospitalized Older Population
Active, not recruiting NCT03932890 - Thirst-guided Subject-controlled Rehydration in Healthy Volunteers N/A