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Tundra lists 6 Sport clinical trials. Each listing includes eligibility criteria, study locations, and direct links to research sites in the Tundra directory.
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NCT07458581
TPCT Underwater Rugby Women
This randomized controlled trial evaluates whether adding a short, structured team-reflection protocol (Tactical Programme for Critical Thinking, TPCT) to regular elite women's underwater rugby training improves tactical efficiency. Both groups complete the same training content and time; the TPCT group uses brief guided discussion during recovery intervals, while the control group uses the same time for passive recovery. Tactical efficiency is assessed using video-recorded 3v3 scrimmages coded with the RUSTAC checklist at baseline and after 6 weeks.
Gender: FEMALE
Ages: 18 Years - Any
Updated: 2026-03-09
NCT07321496
The Most Demanding Match Periods: Should GPS Data be Normalized
To date, the characterization of Most Demanding Periods (MDPs) in soccer has relied almost exclusively on absolute metrics, suggesting that the peak demands currently reported in the scientific literature are inherently shaped by these fixed thresholds. This reliance on such absolute metrics may lead to an under- or overestimation of the true relative intensity experienced by each player, thus limiting the accuracy of MDPs interpretation. Therefore, exploring whether normalized thresholds alter the magnitude of MDPs across a range of time windows (1, 3 and 5 minutes) is crucial to better understand how the most demanding passages of match play manifest when player-specific capacities are considered. Consequently, the aim of the present study was to compare the MDPs derived from absolute and normalized thresholds for HSR and sprinting.
Gender: MALE
Ages: 18 Years - 35 Years
Updated: 2026-01-07
NCT07117643
Ischemic Preconditioning - Perspectives of Use Vivio/in Vitro Studies
Both in sports and medicine, methods that can significantly contribute to improving the ability of tissues to perform their functions are constantly being searched. One of those methods that is increasingly used also in sports is remote ischemic preconditioning (RIPC). Mostly, this procedure involves repeated brief cycles of limb ischemia/reperfusion. This method is often referred as ischemic blood reperfusion and helps to increase the tolerance of treated tissues to the occurrence of possible ischemic episodes in the future. Numerous studies have shown that RIPC induces changes that lead to increased resistance to hypoxia and other stressors in organs (brain, heart, liver). In addition, it has been proven that induction of arterial occlusion in the area of selected limbs before performing physical exercises can affect the improvement of their function, and thus can translate into sports results. In addition, an adaptation of such fibres to damage is mostly associated with the secretion of many factors that influence body function. That's why we conclude that it may affect protein kinases (such like c-Jun N-terminal kinases (JNKs) or serine-threonine kinase = protein kinase B (AKTs)) whose main role is regulation of the activity of a wide spectrum of substrates, influencing cells proliferation, apoptosis, responses to cellular stress and inflammatory process in normal and cancer cells. Concluding that presented kinases activity is associated with cells differentiation and RIPC and physical activity may affect them and the inflammation process that may lead to cytotoxic activity against cancer cells (especially if the effects are combined together). The beneficial increase of anti-tumour activity of the blood serum against pathological isolated tumour cells of prostate cancer (cell lines - LNCaP and PC- 3) was confirmed in our pilot studies. We observed an increase in the anti-cancer properties of serum taken from people that attended RIPC training and performed physical activity. However, the exact mechanism and associated changes in the proteome of blood serum people attending in the RIPC training have not yet been determined. This knowledge would allow us to determine the exact mechanisms of the reperfusion/reocclusion training on the human body and its beneficial activity. Considering that the skeletal muscle is an organ capable of synthesis and release of a number of proteins, cytokines and low molecular weight compounds, especially during physical activity, it should be assumed that intermittent muscle ischemic episodes will lead to increased release of factors that will increase the resistance of muscles and other tissues to stress. At the same time, it was noticed that under conditions of muscular stress induced changes in iron metabolism occur. The binding of free iron through the ferritin protein at the cell level leads to its greater resistance to stressors. In the prism of the above considerations, the results of our preliminary studies showing that the upper limb RIPC procedures cause changes in iron metabolism in white blood cells and may suggest that the procedure of RIPC leads to changes that allow storing iron in a safe form in as ferritin. At the same time, with the increasing interest in iron metabolism, the role and function of amyloid precursor protein (APP) and hepcidin are increasing. It has been proven that APP is a protein that works with ferroportin, thus taking part in iron export from a cell. Moreover, it has been shown that the post-translational modification of APP leads to the formation of amyloid α (determines positive changes) and amyloid β (negative changes). Because there are some indications that sAPPα may be modified by iron changes and associated with cfDNA changes, which substantially increase during i.e. tissue damage, we would like to explore those correlations more deeply. The same decrease in the APP protein level will lead to the inhibition of iron export from the cell and an increase of its concentration in the cell. The nature of such changes in iron metabolism should be considered as adaptive to the ischemic stress on which muscle is exposed during the RIPC procedure. The increase in ferritin in the cell leads to a decrease in the concentration of free iron and thus a reduction in iron-dependent ROS formation. This project will have an impact on the development of the current state of knowledge of the mechanisms of biochemical response to the specific tissue-affecting method in form of remote ischemic preconditioning and will allow determining the role of sAPPα and Cathepsin C and other trophic factors and changes in iron metabolism in this process, taking into account the role of hepcidin and vitamin D. Moreover, the present project may contribute to the determination of the role of presented procedures on cells proliferation, as an example of anti-tumour proprieties, and changes of human serum proteomes.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 49 Years
Updated: 2025-08-12
1 state
NCT03665948
Effect of Ketogenic and Carbohydrate Diet in Crossfit
The purpose of the presented study was to assess the influence of Ketogenic (KD) and a carbohydrate diet with a low glycemic index (CHO-LGI) of a 4-week diet on physical and specific performance capacity, exercise metabolism, as well as concentrations of the selected biochemical blood markers in Crossfit- trained athletes, in a randomised and parallel trial.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 40 Years
Updated: 2024-05-16
NCT03810404
Acute Sodium Bicarbonate Supplementation in Athletes
The purpose of this study is to verify the effect of acute sodium bicarbonate (SB) and placebo (PLA) supplementation on buffering potential kinetics, physical capacity, discipline-specific performance as well as concentration of diagnostically significant blood biochemical indices in athletes, in a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 40 Years
Updated: 2024-05-16
NCT04549610
HMB and Exercise-induced Muscle Damage
The study aims at assessing the influence of β-hydroxy-β-methylbutyrate (HMB) supplementation (4.0 g/day) supplemented for 7 days in a group of speed-strength trained individuals on lower-body strength performance, selected muscle histological, molecular and blood markers of muscle recovery in response to resistance exercise-induced muscle damage.
Gender: MALE
Ages: 18 Years - 35 Years
Updated: 2024-04-23
1 state