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RecruitingInsulin ResistanceImpaired Glucose ToleranceObesity

The Effects of an Obesogenic Lifestyle in Recreationally Active, Young Adults

Eligible age

18–30 yrs

Accepts

All genders

Locations

1 state

Healthy volunteers

Yes

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About this study

This clinical trial aims to learn about the alterations in insulin resistance and metabolic flexibility following a transition to an obesogenic lifestyle in fit young men and women. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Does adding excess carbohydrates when transitioning to a sedentary lifestyle promote insulin resistance and impaired 24hr glucose regulation in healthy men and women? 2. Does adding excess carbohydrates when transitioning to a sedentary lifestyle lower the body's ability to break down fats and carbohydrates in healthy men and women? 3. Does the added physical activity blunt shifts in carbohydrate and fat oxidation in healthy men and women?

Sponsor: University of New Hampshire

You may qualify if…

  • 18-30 years of age
  • Recreationally active completing 75-150 minutes of moderate-to-vigorous intensity exercise (\>2 days/week).
  • Fair cardiorespiratory fitness levels (Men: VO2\>38.4 ml/kg/min; Women: VO2\>32.6 ml/kg/min).

You may not qualify if…

  • Hypertension (resting or diagnosed)
  • Impaired fasting blood glucose (\>100mg/dL)
  • Diagnosed cardiovascular disease
  • Diagnosed diabetes
  • Diagnosed cancer
  • Diagnosed chronic kidney disease
  • Diagnosed musculoskeletal disorders that prevents the individual from exercising on a bike.

Where it's recruiting

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · NCT05912348 · last updated 2024-07-17

The Effects of an Obesogenic Lifestyle in Recreationally Active, Young · TrialPath