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ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT07466732
EARLY_PHASE1

Effects of Caffeine Ingestion on Morning Cognitive and Muscle Repeated Sprint Performance in Males

Sponsor: Liverpool John Moores University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Athletes often compete in the morning when they are biologically weaker; normally in competition heats or quarterfinals to qualify for the finals scheduled in the evening. Some athletes may even choose to perform at submaximal levels in these qualifying rounds, especially when they are expected to perform multiple times in the same day (such as weightlifting at the Olympic Games). Gross muscular performance such as power output or force production is greater in the evening than the morning (\~3-14% variation). Similarly, time-trial performance and repeated sprint performance (RSP; a good measure of performance in team sport) is \~3 and 5 % greater in the evening than the morning. The reason for this daily variation in performance is attributed to central factors (such as the body clock), as well as motivational and peripheral factors, including higher core and muscle temperatures in the evening compared to the morning. The body clock located within the anterior hypothalamus consists of a group of neurons known as suprachiasmatic nuclei, which are responsible for controlling the rhythm of core temperature. This 'master clock' has an endogenous period (\~24.2 h) slightly longer than the 24-h solar day; therefore, must be entrained by time cues (zeitgebers) to remain in sync with the environment, of these the light-dark cycle is the most powerful in humans. The most efficient nutritional ergogenic is caffeine. Recently caffeine has been investigated to reduce the negative influence of diurnal variations on repeated-sprint ability test (10 × 6 s cycle sprints, with 30 s of rest) at 60 min after ingestion of either 5 mg·kg-1 or placebo. A recent study reported that caffeine supplementation did not prevent the reduction in performance in the morning. However, placebo effect can be 3-5% and hence the use of a No-pill condition would ensure that any placebo effect is accounted for and that the true potential effect of caffeine can be established. To the best of our knowledge, no study has yet investigated a) caffeine (300 mg), NoPill or Placebo (300 mg dextrose) effects on cognitive and physiological morning performance.

Official title: Effects of Caffeine Ingestion on Morning Cognitive and Muscle Repeated Sprint Performance in Males. Where a Standardized Approach Has Been Employed

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 35 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

15

Start Date

2025-12-08

Completion Date

2026-03-25

Last Updated

2026-03-13

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DRUG

Caffeine

300mg of of caffeine anhydrous in 3 capsules similar to PLACEBO in size and weight

OTHER

Placabo

3 capsules of PLACEBO similar to caffeine condition in size and weight

OTHER

No Pill

No capsules were given

Locations (1)

Tom Reilly Building (LJMU)

Liverpool, Merseyside, United Kingdom