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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06613958

Older Adults Exercising On Time

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
36 (actual)
Sponsor
Leiden University Medical Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
60 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

There are indications from epidemiological cohort studies and animal experiments that timing of physical activity (also referred as "chronoactivity"), irrespective of intensity, impacts health and disease. In view of the detrimental effects of circadian misalignment, the large group of older people suffering from sleep problems, and the seeming importance of chronoactivity, the investigators will perform a randomised cross-over study that aims to uncover the effect of timing of physical activity on insomnia severity and related(circadian) health parameters in older adults with self-reported sleep problems. Here, the investigators hypothesize that timing of physical activity has a beneficial impact on insomnia symptoms and on circadian rhythms of additional health parameters (e.g., metabolic, psychosocial) in older people. To study this research hypothesis, the investigators will examine the effect of physical activity timing on insomnia severity in older adults with self-reported sleep problems. In addition, the investigators will examine the effect of physical activity timing on exploratory rhythmic parameters of biological clock function, physiology and metabolism, mental health, behavioural factors, and immune and cell signalling functions. For this study, a two-armed randomised cross-over study, Dutch speaking older adults between 60 and 80 years old (male and female) and having sleep problems (insomnia severity index\>10 points) from the general population in the Netherlands will be selected as participants for this study. Participants will perform one sedentary period and two period of increased physical activity with different daily patterns: 1)active morning; 2) active evening with a duration of 14 days each. In both active intervention arms, participants will follow an exercise program containing outdoor physical exercise sessions (Vitality Club) containing endurance and strength exercises, relative rest days of 30 minutes light intensity physical activity, and one Active@Home program; a 1-hour training session of various moderate to vigorous activities. The training sessions will be held either in the morning or evening (depending on the intervention arm) and will be one hour long. Study outcomes will be compared between the different intervention groups.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALPhysical activity timingThe investigators will compare our interventions to a 14-day period of sedentary behavior, during which the participant will refrain from any moderate to vigorous exercise. Next, participants will participate in two interventions consisting each of a 14-day physical activity regimen. The active morning and active evening interventions are equal in content. Both groups will be instructed to refrain from any moderate to vigorous exercise for the rest of the day. Per intervention, a total of eight Vitality Club training session comprising of a combination of aerobic endurance training and resistance exercise training will be given by a trained sports coach or physical therapist specialized in geriatric physical therapy. During the weekends, participants will be asked to perform a 'relative rest' session with some light activity during the training time window of the intervention arm.

Timeline

Start date
2024-05-02
Primary completion
2024-06-27
Completion
2024-06-27
First posted
2024-09-26
Last updated
2024-09-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Netherlands

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06613958. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.