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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT07497659

Ischemic Preconditioning in Resistance Exercise in Older Women

Ischemic Preconditioning and Cardiac Demand During Resistance Exercise in Older Women: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
30 (actual)
Sponsor
Universidade Federal do Triangulo Mineiro · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
60 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

This study investigates whether ischemic preconditioning (IPC) can reduce cardiac demand after resistance exercise in older women. Aging is associated with increased cardiovascular stress, especially due to elevated blood pressure and cardiac demand during and after exercise. Strategies that can reduce this overload may improve exercise safety in older women. This is a randomized, single-blind, crossover clinical trial involving 30 women aged 60 years or older. Participants perform two conditions: ischemic preconditioning (IPC) and a sham condition (SHAM), followed by a standardized resistance exercise session. The primary outcome is cardiac workload, assessed by the rate-pressure product (systolic blood pressure × heart rate) during post-exercise recovery. Secondary outcomes include blood pressure, heart rate, and heart rate recovery. The results of this study may contribute to safer exercise strategies for older women.

Detailed description

Aging is associated with significant cardiovascular alterations, including increased arterial stiffness, impaired endothelial function, and elevated cardiac workload during and after physical exercise. In older women, these changes are exacerbated by postmenopausal hormonal decline, increasing vulnerability to cardiovascular stress. Resistance exercise is recommended to improve strength, functional capacity, and overall health in older adults. However, it may induce acute increases in blood pressure and myocardial workload, particularly in individuals with reduced vascular compliance and impaired autonomic regulation. These responses may persist into the recovery period, increasing cardiovascular risk. Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) is a non-pharmacological intervention that involves repeated cycles of vascular occlusion and reperfusion. This procedure can promote vascular adaptations, including increased nitric oxide bioavailability, improved endothelial function, and reduced peripheral vascular resistance. These mechanisms may contribute to attenuating hemodynamic stress during and after exercise. Although IPC has shown promising results in young adults and clinical populations, there is limited evidence regarding its effects on hemodynamic responses following resistance exercise in older women. This study is designed as a randomized, single-blind, crossover clinical trial including 30 physically independent women aged 60 years or older. Participants will complete two experimental conditions in randomized order: ischemic preconditioning (IPC) and a sham condition (SHAM). The IPC protocol consists of three cycles of 3 minutes of arterial occlusion at a pressure 50 mmHg above systolic blood pressure, interspersed with 3 minutes of reperfusion. The sham condition consists of the same procedure with a fixed low pressure (20 mmHg), insufficient to induce arterial occlusion. After each intervention, participants will perform a standardized resistance exercise session composed of four exercises: horizontal row, bench press, leg extension, and 45-degree leg press. The intensity will be set at 80% of 10-repetition maximum, with three sets of 10 repetitions per exercise and standardized rest intervals. Hemodynamic variables will be assessed at rest, after the intervention, during exercise, and during recovery. The primary outcome is cardiac workload, assessed by the rate-pressure product, measured 20 minutes after exercise. Secondary outcomes include systolic, diastolic, and mean arterial blood pressure, heart rate, and heart rate recovery at 60 seconds. Perceptual variables will be used to ensure similar baseline conditions between sessions. Statistical analysis will be performed using linear mixed models, including condition, period, and sequence as fixed effects, with baseline values as covariates and random intercepts for participants.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEIschemic PreconditioningIschemic preconditioning consists of three cycles of 3 minutes of arterial occlusion at a pressure 50 mmHg above systolic blood pressure, interspersed with 3 minutes of reperfusion. The procedure is applied using a blood pressure cuff positioned on the proximal thighs in an alternating unilateral manner, where one limb undergoes occlusion while the contralateral limb remains in reperfusion. The intervention is performed prior to a standardized resistance exercise session.
DEVICESham PreconditioningThe sham condition consists of the same procedure and timing as the ischemic preconditioning protocol, using a blood pressure cuff applied to the proximal thighs in an alternating unilateral manner. However, a fixed pressure of 20 mmHg is applied, which is insufficient to induce arterial occlusion. The procedure is performed prior to a standardized resistance exercise session.

Timeline

Start date
2025-05-28
Primary completion
2025-09-18
Completion
2025-09-18
First posted
2026-03-27
Last updated
2026-03-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Brazil

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07497659. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.