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Sedentary Lifestyle clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05467280 Active, not recruiting - Physical Inactivity Clinical Trials

WISE Project - Women's Involvement in Steady Exercise

Start date: August 5, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The general objective is to assess adherence to a HIIT-type exercise program, complemented with nutritional plans and other health-related advice, which will be administered through a mobile application in sedentary girls.

NCT ID: NCT05135234 Active, not recruiting - Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trials

Developing a Physiological Understanding of High Duration Activity

Start date: August 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

When muscles are not contracting, the local energy demand by muscle and use of specific fuels used to produce energy by oxidative metabolism are minimal. The time people spend sitting inactive (sedentary time) typically comprises more than half of the day. This sedentary behavior is associated with elevated risk of diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, some cancers, and multiple conditions leading to poor aging. From a progressive series of experiments, the driving goal is to develop a physiological method for sustaining contractile activity via oxidative metabolism over more time than is possible by traditional exercise (hours, not minutes per day). Developing a physiological method suitable of prolonged muscular activity for ordinary people (who are often unfit) requires gaining fundamental insights about muscle biology and biomechanics. This also entails a careful appreciation of the ability to isolate specific muscles in the leg during controlled movements, such as the soleus muscle during isolated plantarflexion. This includes quantifying specific biological processes that are directly responsive to elevated skeletal muscle recruitment. The investigators will focus on movement that is safe and practical for ordinary people to do given their high amount of daily sitting time. This includes developing methods to optimally raise muscle contractile activity, in a way that is not limited by fatigue, and is feasible throughout as many minutes of the day as possible safely. This also requires development of methodologies to quantify specific muscular activity, rather than generalized body movement. There is a need to learn how much people can increase muscle metabolism by physical activity that is perceived to them as being light effort. It is important to learn if this impacts systemic metabolic processes under experimental conditions over a short term time span in order to avoid confounding influences of changes in body weight or other factors.

NCT ID: NCT03560544 Active, not recruiting - Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trials

The Effect of Breaking up Sitting in the Workplace on Cardiometabolic Risk and Worker Productivity

Start date: June 25, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) will examine the effect of a tailored workplace intervention based on interrupting sitting on work productivity, well-being and cardio-metabolic risk in office workers. The experimental group in the 8-week intervention will be prompted to alternate between sitting and standing while working. The ratio between sitting and standing will begin at 3:1 (two hours per day in an eight-hour day) and increase to 1:1 (four hours per day in an eight-hour day) by the end of the second week of the eight-week intervention.

NCT ID: NCT03556670 Active, not recruiting - Health Behavior Clinical Trials

Active Workplace Study

Start date: July 10, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Exposure to sedentary work is an occupational hazard with significant health and safety consequences. Sedentary behavior is an independent predictor of heart disease, diabetes, early mortality, and accounts for the majority of the increase in obesity in the US. Prolonged sitting, common in modern sedentary work environments, contributes to increases in musculoskeletal pain, injuries, and detrimental changes in physiological functioning. Call center employees, who are among the most sedentary workers in the US, area priority population for Total Worker Health interventions. This project is designed to substantially improve health, safety, and well-being in call center employees, including physiological outcomes that contribute to chronic diseases.The study tests whether a Total Worker Health oriented intervention is more effective than usual practices for increasing the utilization of health and safety resources and improving worker health and safety. Study results will have implications for over 30 million sedentary workers in the US.

NCT ID: NCT03511352 Active, not recruiting - Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trials

Sedentary Behavior Interrupted: A Trial of Acute Effects on Biomarkers of Healthy Aging

Start date: May 8, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This protocol "Sedentary Behavior Interrupted: A randomized crossover trial of acute effects on biomarkers of healthy aging in the laboratory (Project 1)" is part of a National Institutes of Aging Program Grant called "Sedentary Time & Aging Mortality and Physical Function (STAR). The overall purpose of the STAR program to is to better understand how to interrupt sitting time and the consequences for healthy aging in postmenopausal women. This protocol (also referred to Project 1 of the STAR program) is a 3-condition randomized crossover clinical trial of up to 86 postmenopausal women to test whether different interruptions to prolonged sitting improve metabolism.

NCT ID: NCT03473145 Active, not recruiting - Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trials

Sedentary Behavior Interrupted Randomized Controlled Trial (P2)

Start date: May 30, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Epidemiological findings indicate that older adults do not meet physical activity (PA) guidelines & spend up to 11 hrs/day sitting. Given the high prevalence of sedentary behavior (SB), the higher chronic disease risk in this population, & the age-associated challenges of meeting traditional PA guidelines, involving longer bouts of moderate PA, the investigators hypothesize that older adult health will benefit from new strategies to interrupt sitting. This protocol "Sedentary Behavior Interrupted: A randomized trial of 3-month effects on biomarkers of healthy aging and physical functioning in the real world (Project 2)" is part of a National Institutes of Aging Program Grant called "Sedentary Time & Aging Mortality and Physical Function (STAR). The overall purpose of the STAR program to is to better understand how to interrupt sitting time and the consequences for healthy aging in postmenopausal women. This protocol (also referred to Project 2 of the STAR program) is a 3-arm randomized control trial designed to assess ways of interrupting sitting in 405 overweight, postmenopausal women.

NCT ID: NCT03356262 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2

The QUebec Adipose and Lifestyle InvesTigation in Youth (QUALITY) Cohort

QUALITY
Start date: July 25, 2005
Phase:
Study type: Observational

The QUebec Adipose and Lifestyle InvesTigation in Youth (QUALITY) Cohort study is a unique and comprehensive longitudinal study of 630 Caucasian children and their parents that was designed to investigate the natural history and determinants of childhood obesity and its cardiometabolic consequences.

NCT ID: NCT03295734 Active, not recruiting - Hypertension Clinical Trials

ACES - ACE Inhibitors Combined With Exercise for Seniors With Hypertension

ACES
Start date: May 29, 2018
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this project is to conduct a randomized, controlled trial (RCT) to determine if choice of antihypertensive medication influences changes in functional status and other cardiovascular risk factors among older persons with hypertension when combined with physical exercise.

NCT ID: NCT03079258 Active, not recruiting - Sedentary Lifestyle Clinical Trials

Physical Activity and Vascular Health During Pregnancy

Start date: April 23, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The aim of this study is to determine the effect of aerobic exercise on maternal and offspring vascular health.

NCT ID: NCT02467881 Active, not recruiting - Physical Activity Clinical Trials

Physical Activity and Sedentary Behavior Change; Impact on Lifestyle

Start date: September 2015
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Diabetes Prevention Program translational efforts, such as the Group Lifestyle Balance Program (GLB), have been shown to be effective in reducing weight and modifying diabetes and CVD risk factors in a variety of diverse community settings. Although one of the two primary goals of these DPP translation programs focuses on increasing physical activity levels, few published DPP translation studies reported results on change in physical activity with only one study reporting activity levels from an objective measurement instrument. In order to completely understand the role that physical activity plays in making healthy lifestyle change, it is critical that we validate the impact of activity using a valid and reliable objective measure. In addition, current studies suggest that decreasing time spent sitting may have a positive health impact separate from the effects of participating in planned bouts of moderate intensity activity. Therefore, we propose to examine the impact of a modified version of the GLB program, which will focus on decreasing sedentary/sitting behaviors. The results of this project will provide information regarding best options for physical activity within lifestyle intervention programs, focusing both on verifying the current role of physical activity in lifestyle intervention using an objective measure and on examining an alternative intervention option for translation efforts.