The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of 6- and 12-week supplementation of a bioactive whey protein concentrate drink containing dairy phospholipids on cognitive function and mood in healthy young to middle aged adults. The proposed randomised, double blind, placebo-controlled, parallel groups design methodology will assess the cognitive, mood and lifestyle effects of 40g per day of bioactive whey protein concentrate powder mixed with water and matched placebo prior to (baseline) and after -6 and 12-week supplementation. The trial will utilise the COMPASS cognitive assessment system (Northumbria University) during the laboratory visits to measure performance on the cognitive tasks and a range of mood measures between visits examining general mood, stress, depression, anxiety, sleep quality, fatigue, and physical symptoms. Additionally, dairy dietary habits will be recorded throughout to allow for any significant changes to diet to be assessed for the potential influence on the outcome variables. Participants will be asked not to make any major changes to their diet or exercise regime for the duration of the trial. This will be checked by asking the participant if there has been any significant changes at each visit. Blood samples will also be taken from a subset of participants who opt into this part of the trial to measure any changes to plasma phospholipid profiles. 220 participants will participate, aged 25-49, and self-report as in good health. Participants will be supplied with the treatment whilst visiting the research centre on testing days and will then consume treatment at home daily. Participants will record the time they take their treatment each day in a diary that will then be returned to the research team at the end of the study testing period.
The study will follow a randomised, placebo-controlled, double-blind, parallel groups design. Participants will attend the research centre on four separate occasions, which will include a screening/training visit, pre intervention testing visit, a mid-point testing visit (at 6 weeks), and a completion of intervention testing visit (at 12 weeks). There will be 5 appointments in total including the online appointment to check for eligibility. The remote screening session will be completed via telephone call and will comprise briefing on the requirements for the study, answering any initial questions, obtaining of informed consent via completion of an online consent form, health screening, collection of demographic information, and completion of the Caffeine Consumption Questionnaire (CCQ). The introductory/training visit to the laboratory will begin with physiological eligibility measures that cannot be completed remotely (e.g., blood pressure, height and weight, waist-to-hip ratio) followed by training on the cognitive and mood measures. Opportunity sampling will be used to recruit participants. The study will include 220 healthy participants aged between 25-49 years, who will receive 12 weeks' worth of either 40g per day of bioactive whey protein concentrate powder containing dairy phospholipids (to be mixed with approx. 350ml water to form a drink), or similar amount per day of matched placebo powder. Participants will be randomly allocated to either the treatment or placebo group and neither the participant nor the researcher will know which group they have been allocated to. Full instructions of how and when to take treatment each day will be explained to the participants when treatment is provided at testing visit 1. The day before each of the study testing days, participants will be sent a link to a set of questionnaires they must complete before attending the lab on the following day. The set includes questionnaires measuring perceived stress, sleep quality, levels of fatigue, physical symptoms, and general health and well-being. The questionnaires should take the participants approx. 45 minutes to complete on their computer, smartphone, or tablet at home. On each of the three study testing days (Day 1, 42, and 84) participants will attend the research centre, having abstained from alcohol for 24 hours, and caffeine overnight, following a standardised breakfast of cereal and/or toast at home no later than 1 hour prior to arrival. Upon arrival to the research centre, participants continued eligibility will be checked before completing the 1 hour long computerised cognitive assessment using the Computerised mental performance assessment system (COMPASS). The cognitive assessment will employ a broad selection of tasks assessing performance within the "Attention", "Working Memory", "Episodic Memory", "learning" and "Executive Function" cognitive domains. The cognitive demand battery (CDB), which assess cognitive functioning and subjective mental fatigue during sustained performance of mentally demanding tasks, will also be incorporated. Upon completion of the computerised cognitive assessment, participants will complete the NASA task load index (NASA TLX) to measure perceived task mental demand. Participants will additionally complete a treatment guess form at their final visit and will be fully debriefed. Participants that opt into the blood sampling portion of this study will also attend the research centre on two separate additional occasions, the day (or two days) before the first and final testing visit, to have their blood taken. Participants will be required to attend the research centre fasted and therefore all blood draw appointments will be held in the morning. A venous blood sample will be taken by a trained phlebotomist. Samples will then be processed and stored at Northumbria University until time of analysis where they will be analysed for plasma phospholipid profiles. These additional blood visit will last approx. 15 minutes per visit.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
220
Northumbria University - Brain Performance and Nutrition Research Centre
Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom
RECRUITINGCognitive function - Cognitive domain factor score
Effects of supplementation on the cognitive domain memory, measured using the following tasks through the Computerised Mental Performance Assessment System (COMPASS, Northumbria University) :Numeric Working Memory, immediate word recall, delayed word recall, delayed word recognition, and delayed picture recognition. Participants will receive scores of accuracies on all tasks, which will be in the form of the percentage of responses correct. Higher scores indicate better memory performance, lower scores indicate worse memory performance.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following chronic dose of intervention at 6 weeks and 12 weeks.
Profile of Mood States (POMS)
65-item measure, summed to create measures of vigour-activity (range 0-32), tension-anxiety (range 0-36), fatigue-inertia (0-28), depression-dejection (0-60), confusion-bewilderment (0-28), and anger-hostility (0-48). Higher scores indicate higher current levels of each aspect of mood. Answers are rated using a 5-point scale between "not at all (0)" and "extremely (4)".
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12-week chronic intervention
Perceived Stress Scale (PSS)
10-item measure, summed to create a single value with higher scores indicating higher levels of stress. Scores can range from 0 to 40. Scores ranging from 0-13 would be considered low perceived stress, scores ranging from 14-26 would be considered moderate perceived stress, and scores ranging from 27-40 would be considered high perceived stress.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12-week chronic intervention
Perceived Stress Reactivity Scale (PSRS)
23-item measure, summed to create measures of prolonged reactivity (scores from 0-8), reactivity to work overload (scores from 0-10), reactivity to social conflict (scores from 0-10), reactivity to failure (scores from 0-8), reactivity to social evaluation (scores from 0-10), and perceived stress reactivity total (scores from 0-46). Higher scores indicate higher perceived stress reactivity.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12- week chronic intervention
The Cohen-Hoberman Inventory of Physical Symptoms (CHIPS)
33-item measure, summed to create a measure of number of health complaints in the previous 2 weeks. Answers are recorded using a 5-item Likert scale ranging from 0 (meaning they have not been bothered by this problem), to 4 (meaning the problem has been an extreme bother). All the scores across the 33 items will be summed together to create a total score. The score will range from 0 to 132 and will indicate how extensively a participant has been bothered by physical symptoms in the previous 2-week period (higher scores indicating more bothered by physical symptoms).
Time frame: Prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12- week chronic intervention
Subjective sleep via the Patient-Reported Outcome Measurement, Information System Sleep Disturbance Scale- shoer form (PROMIS-SD)
prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12-week chronic intervention Description: 8-item measure, summed to create a single value with higher scores indicating higher levels of sleep disturbances. Responses are recorded using a 5-item Likert scale ranging from 1 (Not at all) to 5 (Very much). Total score will therefore range from 8 to 40.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12-week chronic intervention
Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-21)
21 item measure, summed to create 3 component scores; depression, anxiety and stress. Responses recorded using a 4-item Liker scale (0-3). Raw score range rom 0-63 as an indication of overall distress (the higher the score the more general distress). Depression, anxiety, and stress scored between 0 and 21. The higher the score indicated higher levels of depression, anxiety and stress.
Time frame: Prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12-week chronic intervention
Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS)
10-item measure, summed to create a measure of over perceived fatigue where less than 22 indicates "normal" levels of fatigue, 22-34 indicates mild-to-moderate fatigue and 35 or higher indicates severe fatigue. Total score ranges from 10 to 50.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12- week chronic supplementation
Perceived task demand via the NASA Task Load Index (NASA TLX)
five 7-point scales summed to create a measure of perceived mental workload of the cognitive tasks. Higher scores indicating higher perceived task demand.
Time frame: Following each of the cognitive assessments (3) at baseline, 6- weeks, and 12-week supplementation.
Cognitive function- individual cognitive task score
location learning task (accuracy), immediate word recall (accuracy), delayed word recall (accuracy) , delayed word recognition (accuracy and reaction time), delayed picture recognition (accuracy and reaction time), simple reaction time (reaction time), numeric working memory (accuracy and reaction time), Stroop (accuracy and reaction time), delayed location learning task (accuracy), and arrow flankers measured through the software Computerised Mental Performance Assessment System (COMPASS), Northumbria University. Scores for accuracy are the percentage of correct responses on that task. Reaction time is measures in milliseconds, and the lower the score the faster the response time.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12- week chronic supplementation
Cognitive function- cognitively demanding tasks
cognitive function (scores based on number of answers correct within the time frame for serial subtractions, and accuracy of correct responses and reaction time measured in milliseconds for rapid visual information processing task) and mental fatigue (measured using a bespoke visual assessment scale) during extended performance of cognitively demanding tasks (cognitive demand battery, comprising serial 3s subtractions, serial 7s subtractions, rapid visual information processing task, and mental fatigue scales, repeated 3 times), measured though the software Computerised Mental Performance Assessment System (COMPASS), Northumbria University.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 6- and 12- week supplementation
Changes to blood plasma phospholipid profiles
Using venous blood samples to measure changes to plasma phospholipid profiles pre and post intervention.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following 12-week chronic supplementation
Cognitive function - cognitive domain factor scores
Speed of attention (reaction time), accuracy of attention (accuracy), speed of memory (reaction time), accuracy of working memory (accuracy), accuracy of executive function (accuracy), learning (accuracy), delayed learning (accuracy) and accuracy of episodic memory (accuracy) measured by Computerised Mental Performance Assessment System (COMPASS, Northumbria University). Scores for accuracy are the percentage of correct responses on that task. Reaction time is measures in milliseconds, and the lower the score the faster the response time.
Time frame: prior to (baseline) and following chronic dose of intervention at 6 weeks and 12 weeks.
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