The purpose of the Exerci-Zzz Study is to learn more about how the time of day that exercise is performed influences sleep quality and fat metabolism overnight in adults with metabolic syndrome. In this study, exercise will be performed in the early evening and the investigators will measure participants' sleep quality and fat metabolism overnight in a metabolic room. The total study will take approximately 2-3 months to complete. Enrolled participants will complete 2 study conditions (evening exercise and control) in a metabolic room. Each of these visits will last 30 hours and require that the participant stay in the metabolic room. During the evening exercise participants will be asked to perform exercise in the early evening. Finally, during the control condition participants will be asked spend the day in the metabolic room (no exercise performed during this condition). During each of these conditions, the investigators will measure participant sleep quality and fat metabolism overnight. In the morning, the investigators will perform a metabolic test to assess the responses of certain hormones. Findings from this study will identify how exercise influences novel contributors to metabolic syndrome (sleep quality and nocturnal metabolism) and shed light on some potential mechanisms to explain the variability in exercise responses.
Metabolic syndrome (MetS) is a major risk factor for many chronic diseases, including diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Sleep is recognized a risk factor for many of the conditions comprising MetS (e.g. high blood sugars, obesity). Interestingly, fat metabolism during your sleep is important for regulating several key components of health, like risk of obesity and glucose tolerance. While exercise is recognized as a health enhancing behavior to reduce the risk of many chronic diseases, the effect of exercise on sleep quality and nocturnal fat metabolism is largely unknown. This study plans to learn more about how the time of day that you perform exercise influences sleep quality and fat metabolism overnight in adults with metabolic syndrome. In this study, exercise will be performed in the early evening and the investigators will measure your sleep quality and fat metabolism overnight in our metabolic room. Findings from this study will identify how exercise influences novel contributors to metabolic syndrome (sleep quality and nocturnal metabolism) and shed light on some potential mechanisms to explain the variability in exercise responses.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
12
Participants will perform 4 study visits over 1-3 months. The 1st study visit is a screening visit, during which eligibility will be determined. During the 2nd visit, resting metabolic rate (RMR) and body composition will be measured. Participants will also perform a submaximal exercise test. Prior to each condition, habitual sleep/wake patterns will then be measured for 1 week. Participants will then perform each of the 2 study conditions (evening exercise and control) in randomized order with at least a 1-week washout period between conditions. Females will be studied during the luteal phase to control for potential confounding effects of hormonal variations across the menstrual cycle.
University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Nocturnal FFA Concentrations
Free Fatty Acids (FFA) concentrations
Time frame: 8-hours
Nocturnal Fat Oxidation
Total fat oxidation (measured by whole room calorimeter)
Time frame: 8-hours
Nocturnal Glucose and Insulin Concentrations
Nocturnal glycemic control
Time frame: 8-hours
Sleep Quality (Percent Time in Slow Wave Sleep [SWS])
Time spent in slow wave sleep
Time frame: 8-hours
Sleep Latency
Time spent to fall asleep
Time frame: 8-hours
Sleep Interruptions
Wake after sleep onset \[WASO\]
Time frame: 8-hours
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