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Acute Renal Injury During High Intensity Training

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clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03678285
Is a
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Clinical study
0

Clinical Study attributes

NCT Number
NCT036782850
Health Conditions in Trial
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EXercise
0
Acute kidney injury
Acute kidney injury
0
Trial Recruitment Size
420
Trial Sponsor
University of Wyoming
University of Wyoming
0
Trial Collaborator
Lund University
Lund University
0
Clinical Trial Start Date
October 1, 2018
0
Primary Completion Date
May 30, 2019
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Study Completion Date
June 30, 2019
0
Clinical Trial Study Type
Interventional0
Interventional Trial Purpose
Screening0
Intervention Type
Other0
Intervention Name
HIFRT Workout0
Interventional Trial Phase
Not Applicable0
Participating Facility
University of Wyoming
University of Wyoming
0
Official Name
Hematological Risk Factors Related to Acute Renal Injury During High Intensity Training0
Last Updated
July 16, 2021
0
Allocation Type
NA0
Intervention Model
Single Group Assignment0
Masking Type
None (Open Label)0
Study summary

The proposed work is designed to be the first in a series of studies investigating the health benefits and risks related to high intensity training (HIT) exercise. Our specific aims are to determine, 1) if participation in a single bout of HIT induces hematological markers consistent with acute kidney injury (AKI), and 2) if risk is predicted by the pre-exercise concentration of plasma proenkephalin-A. This investigation is an observational case control study. In year one, data collection procedures will be refined with \~40 participants local to the University of Wyoming and training will occur for collaborators from Wyoming community and tribal colleges. In year two, data collection will expand to some of the 12 CrossFit® gyms in Wyoming with assistance from the community and tribal colleges. Blood and urine samples will be collected before and up to 48 h after a standardized bout of HIT exercise on \~100 participants. Baseline blood samples will be analyzed for proenkephalin-A. All blood samples will be analyzed for markers of muscle damage (e.g., creatine kinase and myoglobin), and markers of kidney function (e.g., serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen). Urine will be analyzed for markers of filtration function (e.g., albumin, creatinine, neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin \[NGAL\], and kidney injury molecule 1 \[KIM-1\]). Lastly, the severity of kidney damage will be compared with the number of risk alleles and proenkephalin-A concentration. The investigators envision that the bout of HIT exercise will induce markers consistent with skeletal muscle damage in most participants and, based on literature from other styles of intense exercise, that acute kidney injury will be diagnosable in between 50-75% of participants. Secondarily, the investigators predict that the concentration of proenkephalin-A will be inversely related to the change in kidney function from before to after the HIT exercise bout.

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