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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06527248
NA

Nitrate, Exercise and Vascular Function in Midlife Women

Sponsor: University of Vienna

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

The purpose of this clinical study in women after menopause is to investigate whether the daily intake of nitrate from beetroot juice over 12 weeks enhances the positive effect of exercise training on vascular function, blood pressure and physical performance. The risk of cardiovascular diseases (CVD) increases with advancing age and women are particularly affected. In women, the decline in the sex hormone oestrogen in the blood circulation with menopause contributes to impaired vascular function and an increased CVD risk; in part through increased inflammatory processes, oxidative stress, and a reduced body's own production of nitric oxide (NO). NO is a signaling molecule that is important for vascular function. Endurance-based exercise training is a key lifestyle strategy to prevent CVD. However, studies indicate that exercise is less effective in terms of its health-promoting adaptations in women after menopause as compared with men of similar age. This study investigates the effect of exercise training in combination with the intake of nitrate-rich beetroot juice on functions of the cardiovascular system. Nitrate is a nitrogen compound that is found naturally in plant foods (e.g. beetroot juice) and is converted to NO in the human body. Results of previous studies indicate vasodilatory, blood pressure-lowering and performance-enhancing effects as well as positive influences on inflammatory processes and oxidative stress following nitrate intake. The hypothesis is that nitrate intake concomitant to training promotes training adaptations and further improves vascular function, blood pressure and physical performance compared to training without nitrate intake. For the study, 54 untrained postmenopausal women (with the ages between 45 and 65 years) will be recruited and randomly allocated into two groups. Both groups will undergo 12 weeks of endurance-based exercise training. One group will receive nitrate-rich beetroot juice, and the other nitrate-depleted beetroot juice (as placebo). Vascular function, blood pressure, maximum oxygen uptake, and blood biomarkers for nitrate metabolism, inflammation status and oxidative stress will be examined. The anticipated study results will provide new insights into whether nitrate as a 'training adjunct' improves health-promoting training adaptations in women after menopause. The overall aim is to improve the cardiovascular health and performance of middle-aged women and reduce their increased CVD risk.

Official title: Effects of Dietary Nitrate From Beetroot Juice on Vascular Function and Adaptations to Exercise Training in Postmenopausal Women: a Randomized, Placebo-controlled Study

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

45 Years - 65 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

54

Start Date

2025-01-01

Completion Date

2027-03

Last Updated

2024-08-09

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Nitrate group

Daily consumption of 70 mL beetroot juice containing \~400 mg nitrate over an intervention period of 12 weeks concomitant to exercise training, either 3 hours pre-exercise on training days or with breakfast on non-training days.

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENT

Placebo group

Daily consumption of 70 mL nitrate-depleted beetroot juice (placebo) over an intervention period of 12 weeks concomitant to exercise training, either 3 hours pre-exercise on training days or with breakfast on non-training days.