Organic Mental Disor |
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Clinical Trial: Mental Effort and Muscle Strength
This study is no longer recruiting patients.
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Purpose
The purpose of this study is to determine the effect of mental effort on improving muscle strength.
| Condition | Treatment or Intervention | Phase |
|---|---|---|
| Aging Muscle strength | Behavior: Mental effort in muscle strengthening | Phase I |
MedlinePlus consumer health information
Study Type: Interventional
Study Design: Treatment, Randomized, Single Blind, Active Control, Parallel Assignment, Efficacy Study
Official Title: Mental-effort Effect on Large Muscle Strengthening
Study start: October 1999; Study completion: May 2003
Training that involves heavy loads or resistance strengthens muscles. Recent data suggest that substantial voluntary strength gains can be achieved with training involving low resistance and strong mental effort. In contrast, individuals who train with the same low intensity contractions but with low mental effort show no improvement in strength.
This study will evaluate the relationship between mental effort muscle strength improvements by comparing the improvement in muscle strength in participants who have trained with different levels of mental effort. In addition to evaluating muscle strength, this study will also examine the neural mechanisms underlying muscle strength improvements.
Four groups of volunteers (65 years old and over) will participate in a training program directed at elbow-flexor muscles. One group will be trained with an intensity near the level of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC group); a second group will be trained with high mental effort, low muscle intensity contractions (HME group); a third group will be trained with low mental effort, low muscle intensity elbow-flexion contractions (LME group); and the fourth (control) group will not be trained but will participate in the strength tests. Training will be performed every weekday for 12 weeks. Participants will be evaluated by functional MRI (fMRI), EEG-derived motor activity-related cortical potential (MRCP), surface EMG signals, and the MRI T2 relaxation time.
Preliminary analysis of results shows that the HME group gained more than 13% strength, the LME group showed a statistically insignificant 6% change, and the no-practice control group did not show any change in elbow flexor muscle strength. We expect the MVC group to have the highest strength gains among the four groups.
Eligibility
Ages Eligible for Study: 65 Years and above, Genders Eligible for Study: Both
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- Healthy individuals free of neurological impairment
Exclusion Criteria
- Already involved in regular physical training
- Neuromuscular disorders
- Medications known to affect neuromuscular system (other than moderate alcohol or caffeine)
- Left-hand dominant
Location Information
Ohio
Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, 44195, United States
Guang H. Yue, Ph.D., Principal Investigator, Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Biomedical Engineering
More Information
Record last reviewed: March 2003
Last Updated: October 13, 2004
Record first received: April 25, 2003
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00059436
Health Authority: United States: Federal Government
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this record on 2005-04-08
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov
Cache Date: April 9, 2005
Resources
- Organic Mental Disor (HealthWorld)

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