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Active Not RecruitingNCT06544213

A 60 Days Head Down Tilt Bedrest With Artificial Gravity and Cycling Exercise on 24 Healthy Male (BRACE)

A Randomized Controlled Study on 24 Healthy Male Volunteers Evaluating the Effects of Centrifugation and Exercise to Prevent the Deconditioning Induced by 60 Days of Head-down Bedrest Used as a Ground-based Model to Mimic Weightlessness.

Status
Active Not Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
24 (actual)
Sponsor
Centre National d'Etudes Spatiales · Other Government
Sex
Male
Age
20 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The objective of this study is to investigate whether a cycling exercise coupled with artificial gravity via a short-arm human centrifuge helps to prevent and / or reduce the deleterious effects induced by 60 days of anti-orthostatic bedrest. The secondary objective is to investigate whether the combination of a supine cycling exercise with artificial gravity is more effective than the same supine cycling exercise alone in preventing or reducing the effects of head-down bedrest. During a randomized, 60 day bed rest study, in 24 healthy male adults, the two following aims will be undertaken: * Fourteen scientific protocols will assess the changes in the cardiovascular, metabolic, musculoskeletal, neuro-sensorial, haematological, and immunological systems. * In the above-mentioned systems, the comparative potential beneficial effects of the two countermeasure protocols will also be investigated by the scientific protocols and bedrest standard measurements (BSM).

Detailed description

Space flights have shown the possibilities and limitations of human adaptation to space. For the last 60 years, results have shown that the space environment and microgravity in particular, cause changes that may affect the performance of astronauts. These physiological changes are now better known: prolonged exposure to weightlessness can lead to significant loss of bone and muscle mass, strength, cardiovascular and sensory-motor deconditioning, immune, hormonal and metabolic changes . Moreover, recently a new suite of physiological adaptations and consequences of space flight has been acknowledged. Indeed, after long flights, some astronauts present persistent ophthalmologic changes, mostly a hyperopic shift, an increase in optic nerve sheath diameter and occasionally a papillary oedema now defined by National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) as Spaceflight-Associated Neuro-ocular Syndrome (SANS). Some of these vision changes remain unresolved for years post-flight. This phenomenon has most likely existed since the beginning of human space flight but is just recently being recognized as a major consequence of adaptation to microgravity. Overall, spaceflight induces physiological multi-system deconditioning which may impact astronauts' efficiency and create difficulties upon their return to normal gravity. Understanding the underlying mechanisms of these processes and developing efficient countermeasures to prevent, limit or reverse this deconditioning remain important challenges and major priorities for manned space programs. The space agencies are actively engaged in studying the physiological adaptation to space environment through studies on board the International Space Station (ISS) but also on the ground. Indeed, considering the limited number of flight opportunities, the difficulties related to the performance of in-flight experiments (operational constraints for astronauts, limited capabilities of in-flight biomedical devices), ground-based experiments simulating the effects of weightlessness are used to better understand the mechanisms of physiological adaptation, design and validate the countermeasures. Different methods are used to simulate microgravity on Earth. However, two approaches, -6° head-down bed rest (HDBR) and dry immersion (DI) have provided possibilities for long-term exposures with findings closest to those seen with a weightless state. They produce changes in body composition (including body fluid redistribution), cardiovascular and skeletal muscle characteristics that resemble the effects of microgravity. One of the advantages of the HDBR model is that it has now been used in a great number of studies internationally, and its effects have long been described and compared with those of microgravity and spaceflight. Long-term bedrest is the gold-standard method for studying the effects of weightlessness and to test countermeasures. The HDBR, as the name implies, implicates a long (from several weeks to a year) stay in the supine position, the head tilted down by -6° from the horizontal plane. HDBR is the most frequently used ground-based simulation for gravitational unloading of the human body in western countries. During human space missions, the current most effective countermeasure is physical exercise. However, it is both time-consuming and not completely satisfactory. One of the solutions for this is to combine physical exercise with artificial gravity, with the use of a short-arm human centrifuge (SAHC). This study proposes to test the effectiveness of a countermeasure protocol combining Artificial Gravity (AG) with a cycling exercise, and to compare it with only a cycling exercise, and with a complete lack of physical exercise.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALControl Group60 days of strict head down tilt bed rest at all time. No countermeasure program is performed.
BEHAVIORALCountermeasure Supine Bike60 days of strict head down tilt bed rest at all time. The exercise starts at 40% of VO2max for 5 minutes, followed by a series of 2-minute high- and low-intensity intervals for 20 minutes. 2-minute high-intensity intervals are at 65% VO2max, 70% VO2max, 80% VO2max, 80% VO2max, 70% VO2max and 65% VO2max. 2-minute low-intensity intervals are at 40% VO2max. 3 minutes at 40% of VO2max will end the exercise. VO2max is measured for each volunteer in supine position.
BEHAVIORALCountermeasure AG-Bike60 days of strict head down tilt bed rest at all time. The exercise starts at 40% of VO2max for 5 minutes, followed by a series of 2-minute high- and low-intensity intervals for 20 minutes. 2-minute high-intensity intervals are at 65% VO2max, 70% VO2max, 80% VO2max, 80% VO2max, 70% VO2max and 65% VO2max. 2-minute low-intensity intervals are at 40% VO2max. 3 minutes at 40% of VO2max will end the exercise. VO2max is measured for each volunteer in supine position. The supine bike exercise is performed in a short arm centrifuge in rotation. Volunteers will start pedalling and the centrifuge will start at 0.15 Gz less than individual's threshold. Every 4 minutes thereafter, the AG will be increased by 0.15 Gz, synchronized with the ramping up of cycle ergometer interval intensity. The AG will increase only up to 70 % of their tolerance level,. It will then decrease by 0.15 Gz every 4 minutes, and until the 30-minute exercise is completed.

Timeline

Start date
2023-02-06
Primary completion
2024-04-20
Completion
2026-04-30
First posted
2024-08-09
Last updated
2025-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06544213. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.