CI

At a glance

ClinicalIndex Comparison Record
N/ACompleted· 62 enrolled
Drug / intervention
Stress group +1 moreother
Likely dose
Not stated in record
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Search/NCT04912713
NCT04912713N/ACompleted

Influencia Del Estrés Agudo en el Aprendizaje Motor de Una Tarea Manual Precisa y en la Capacidad de Imaginación Motora

Susana Nunez Nagy·interventional·Posted Jun 3, 2021·Updated Jun 23, 2023

In Brief

A clinical study evaluating Stress group and Control group for Stress, Psychological. Completed, enrolled 62 participants across 4 sites in 2 countries.

Detailed Summary

In motor learning, it is essential to consider that movements are produced by the cooperation and combination of many brain structures and are influenced by the emotions to which individuals are subjected. Several neural circuits have been identified that closely link the emotional system and the motion control system. Stress is a physiological or psychological response to internal or external stressors. In principle, it has an adaptive role. However, the neuroendocrine and autonomic response generated by stress can affect cognitive processes such as memory. In addition, it has been shown to influence motor learning, especially the execution of skills in the early stages of learning. Understanding how movement, emotions and interactions are regulated is significant because of the large number of movements humans perform. Of these, manual tasks represent precise movements that require the integration of many elements by the nervous system to perform these tasks successfully. It is still unknown how acute stress influence the way manual tasks are learned. On the other hand, motor imagery (MI) is a cognitive process that is an important contributor to how movements are planned and executed. Its use has been recommended to improve movement learning and task execution. For an MI program to be effective and individualized, it is imperative to know this ability. However, it is also still unknown how acute stress can affect our motor imagery ability. The main objective of this study is to determine and quantify the effects of acute stress in the learning of a precise manual task not previously trained on four parameters of fine motor control: trajectory error, timing error, timing accuracy, and task accuracy. On the other hand, the aim is to determine if the capacity of internal visual, external visual, and kinesthetic imagery, and the temporal congruence between movement execution and imagery varies when we are subjected to acute stress. It is expected that non-anxious, non-stressed participants who are not induced with acute stress will show better motor performance on the fine motor task and better motor imagery ability and temporal congruence. In contrast, it is expected that participants without anxiety and stress who are induced with acute stress will show poorer motor performance on the fine motor task, and poorer motor imagery ability and temporal congruence.

Study Details

Study Typeinterventional
Allocation--
Masking--
Primary Purpose--
CountriesFrance, Spain

Timeline

N/ACompletedFinished
20222023202420252026
First PostedJun 3, 2021
Enrollment StartJun 14, 2021
Primary CompletionSep 30, 2022
TodayJul 2, 2026
Enrollment to primary: 1.3 yearsPosted 5.1 years ago

Interventions

Stress groupother

This group will perform the MAST stress protocol

Control groupother

This group will perform the MAST control protocol