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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06784544
NA

The Effects of Repeated Operational Stress and Limited Recovery on Resilience Capacity

Sponsor: United States Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

This longitudinal study will examine the effects of repeated bouts of operational stress and limited recovery on integrated MPS, whole-body protein balance, iron absorption, and aerobic performance. Following baseline characterization measures, active adults (n=24) representative of normal weight phenotype (NW; n=12) and overweight phenotype (OW; n=12) will complete a 48h balance phase preceding two rounds of repeated 72h energy deficit exposure each immediately followed by a 48h recovery phase. NW cutoff will be defined ≤ 22% body fat for males and ≤ 32% body fat for females. OW cutoff will be defined as \>22% body fat for males and \>32% body fat for females. These body composition cutoffs are informed by the maximum allowable percent body fat standards outlined in current Army Regulation 600-9. Additional details for determining % body fat are outlined in the experimental procedures section of the protocol.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

17 Years - 39 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

24

Start Date

2025-05

Completion Date

2025-11

Last Updated

2025-01-20

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

Operational Stressors

Intervention consists of a 48 hour energy balance phase preceding two rounds of repeated 72 hour energy deficit exposure each immediately followed by a 48h recovery phase. Balance and recovery phases will meet 100% of baseline energy requirements. Energy deficit phases will include an approximate 60% energy deficit of total daily energy requirements achieved through both a reduction in dietary intake and increased energy expenditure through physical activity.

Locations (1)

US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine

Natick, Massachusetts, United States