Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04985292

Does Probiotic Supplementation Prevent Kidney Injury During Strenuous Physical Exercise?

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
43 (actual)
Sponsor
Göteborg University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Severe heat strain arising from intense physical work under climate conditions that does not allow sufficient heat dissipation may lead to heat stroke. This severe conditions is hypothesized to be secondary to increased gut permeability and leakage of bacterial toxins across the gut membrane, stimulating a systematic inflammatory response and associated organ injury. Repeated such sub-clinical increases in gut permeability has been suggested to contribute to the high burden of chronic kidney disease among heat-stressed workers. Many marathon runners experience a transient increase in kidney injury biomarkers while running. Probiotics have been studied as a way to decrease gut permeability and reduce systemic inflammation in many settings, including in athletes . However, no study has measured renal outcomes among workers or athletes performing strenuous activity. This is of interest as it could test the hypothesis that gut-induced inflammation is a driver of kidney injury during heat stress, and could point to a possible intervention to add on to efforts to relieve heat strain. In the present study, recreational or professional runners will be randomized to take a probiotic supplement or placebo during a 4 week period preceding a strenuous physical exercise (minimum 21 km run). Urine samples will be taken before and after the run, and analyzed for markers of renal injury and inflammation.

Detailed description

Participants registered to run in organised half-marathons, marathons and ultramarathons in Southern Sweden will be recruited. They will be asked to abstain from probiotic supplementation (including functional foods with probiotics) for 2 weeks, and then commence a 4-week period of probiotic or placebo supplementation. At the end of the 4 week treatment period, the participants run the race. Urine samples are taken before and after the race and analysed for kidney injury markers. Stool samples are taken by participants at the initiation of the treatment period, last stool before the race, and first stool after the race.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTProbiotic, Lactobacillus10\^10 colony-forming units of a Lactobacillus strain, packaged in a capsule, once daily
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTPlaceboInactive substance packaged to be identical to active treatment

Timeline

Start date
2021-09-01
Primary completion
2023-12-31
Completion
2023-12-31
First posted
2021-08-02
Last updated
2024-04-16

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04985292. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.