Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04902092

Brain Exercise and Addiction Trial

Brain Exercise and Addiction Trial: Efficacy of a 12-week Aerobic Exercise Regime for Restoring 'Brain Health' in Cannabis Users

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
65 (actual)
Sponsor
Monash University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
20 Years – 55 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Heavy cannabis use is associated with substantive learning and memory impairments and elevated risk of psychopathology. It has been repeatedly demonstrated that the hippocampus, centrally implicated in these processes, is particularly vulnerable to the deleterious effects of prolonged exposure to cannabis. This deterioration of hippocampal structure, function, and biochemistry can be reversed, but this requires two or more years of abstinence from cannabis. However, most heavy cannabis users find it extremely difficult to maintain abstinence over extended periods and current treatments for cannabis use disorders are inadequate. There is a pressing clinical need for an intervention that rapidly accelerates hippocampal recovery, ameliorates the associated cognitive impairments and mental health symptoms, and leads to improved treatment outcomes. One promising candidate is physical exercise. In addition to the well-known physical health benefits, regular exercise also has a potent positive effect on brain health. The current study will investitive the capacity of two different neuroscientifically-informed 12-week exercise programs can restore brain health for heavy long term cannabis users.

Detailed description

Heavy cannabis use is associated with substantive learning and memory impairments and elevated risk of psychopathology. It has been repeatedly demonstrated that the hippocampus, centrally implicated in these processes, is particularly vulnerable to the deleterious effects of prolonged exposure to cannabis. This deterioration of hippocampal structure, function, and biochemistry can be reversed, but this requires two or more years of abstinence from cannabis. However, most heavy cannabis users find it extremely difficult to maintain abstinence over extended periods and current treatments for cannabis use disorders are inadequate. There is a pressing clinical need for an intervention that rapidly accelerates hippocampal recovery, ameliorates the associated cognitive impairments and mental health symptoms, and leads to improved treatment outcomes. One promising candidate is physical exercise. In addition to the well-known physical health benefits, regular exercise also has a potent positive effect on brain health and can increase the size of the hippocampus. It's not yet known how much or what kind of exercise produces the best results. This study has been designed to compare the effects of two different exercise programs. 1. 12 weeks of regular HIIT exercise 2. 12 weeks of regular strength training The research team are investigating whether the programs have a positive impact on brain health and, if they do, whether one is more effective than the other. The research team will also measure whether engaging in either program leads to a reduction in cannabis consumption, and improvements in thinking skills, mental health, and general wellbeing.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALHigh Intensity Interval TrainingExercise sessions will commence with an initial 3-week accustomization period whereby training load will increase incrementally from 2 x 45min sessions with effort peaking at 60% VO2 max (week 1) increasing to 3 x 45minute with effort peaking at 80% VO2max (week 3). Participants will transition to the full HIIT protocol for the remaining weeks. The HIIT component will comprise a work-rest ratio of ≥1:1minutes, with alternating exertion epochs at \>80% VO2max and \<60% VO2max. As VO2max is likely to increase as fitness improves toward the end of the 3-month program, adjustments to HIIT will be made by the exercise physiologist based on real-time heart rate monitoring, ensuring greater accuracy in participants achieving their heart rate targets.
BEHAVIORALStrength and Resistance TrainingExercise sessions will comprise a combination of strength, coordination and mobility exercises. The strength component will consist of 2-3 sets of resistance exercises at ≤70% of a predicted 1 repetition maximum, targeting all body segments. Heart rate tracking will occur to ensure participants do not exceed 70% v02 (or exceed Lactate Threshold).

Timeline

Start date
2019-01-23
Primary completion
2022-06-10
Completion
2022-11-21
First posted
2021-05-26
Last updated
2023-10-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Australia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04902092. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.