BreatheWell: Train Your Breathing, Relax Your Body, Open Your Mind
Summary
- Eligibility
- for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
- Healthy Volunteers
- healthy people welcome
- Location
- at Los Angeles, California
- Dates
- study startedcompletion around
- Principal Investigator
- by Paul Macey, PhD
Description
Summary
The goal of this study is to determine whether tasks related to breathing training (daily inspiratory muscle training (IMT) and increased access to health data/awareness) performed for 12 weeks leads to positive changes in mental and physical states, and if these changes are sustained three months later. The study will assess whether IMT, compared to a sham IMT and the control group, improves psychological well-being, body awareness, and physical relaxation. Although there is evidence that all three interventions make a difference, the extent of their impact is yet to be determined, so the study aims to compare the effectiveness of the interventions, aiming to determine which may be most beneficial.
The main questions the study aims to answer are:
- Do tasks related to breathing training (high resistance IMT, low resistance IMT, or access to health data) performed over 12 weeks enhance mental and physical well-being?
- Are the changes in mental and physical states sustained three months post-intervention?
- Is IMT more effective than sham IMT or simple health data engagement in improving well-being?
- Who benefits from each intervention?
Participants will be randomly assigned to three groups:
- IMT: Daily inspiratory muscle training at a moderate to high resistance.
- Sham IMT: Daily inspiratory muscle training at a low resistance.
- Control: Participants will track their health data but not engage in IMT.
Participants will:
- Engage in daily IMT or sham IMT training for 12 weeks.
- Engage with the Oura ring and app by checking in daily to sync the ring's data and review personal health insights.
- Complete daily and weekly surveys tracking mental and physical health.
- Have biometric data collected at baseline, post-intervention (12 weeks), and at a 3-month follow-up.
Official Title
BreatheWell: Does Breathing Resistance Training Relax the Body and Calm the Mind?
Details
This study seeks to investigate the impact of daily inspiratory muscle training (IMT) over 12 weeks on mental and physical well-being, focusing on whether the effects are sustained three months post-intervention. IMT is a breathing exercise known to improve respiratory function and reduce stress. This research will expand on previous findings showing that IMT can influence psychological states, such as increased awareness of the body, and improved relaxation and well-being. The investigators aim to compare the effects of IMT against a sham IMT group and a health data engagement-only group, assessing whether daily IMT enhances psychological well-being, body awareness, and physical relaxation.
Study Design and Groups:
- IMT Group: Participants will engage in daily inspiratory muscle training with the Powerbreathe device at moderate to high resistance, aimed at improving respiratory strength and exploring the effects of higher resistance training on well-being.
- Sham IMT Group: This group will complete daily IMT sessions at low resistance. This type of training encourages slower, deeper breaths, which some participants have found to help with relaxation and improving breath control.
- Engagement-Only Group: Participants will wear the Oura ring, which tracks health metrics such as heart rate, sleep, and physical activity. They will engage with the app to sync their data and review personal insights, fostering health awareness and self-monitoring.
Key Outcome Measures:
- Psychological Well-Being: Evaluated using the NIH Toolbox Psychological Well-Being (PWB) test.
- Body Awareness: Assessed with the Multidimensional Assessment of -Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA) scale.
- Physical Relaxation: Measured by heart rate variability (RMSSD), which reflects vagal tone and overall relaxation.
Study Procedures:
Participants will complete their assigned interventions for 12 weeks, with data collection at baseline, post-intervention (12 weeks), and at a 3-month follow-up. All participants will be asked to engage with weekly surveys to track their mental and physical health. The study also measures adherence, age, gender, physical activity, and sleep quality as potential confounding factors to better understand the broader impacts of the interventions.
This study aims to compare the effects of IMT at different resistance levels to see if it improves well-being, whether these benefits are maintained over time, and how it compares to simply engaging with health-tracking data.
Keywords
Healthy, Breathing, Stress, Breathing Training, Inspiratory Muscle Training, Breathing resistance training, Interoception, Physical and mental well-being, Health tracking, Oura, Respiratory Aspiration, Breathing training device (Inspiratory Muscle Training), Oura Ring
Eligibility
You can join if…
Open to people ages 18 years and up
- Age 18 or higher
- Stable health for the past 3 months.
You CAN'T join if...
- IMT contraindications which relate to people who should not raise lung, thoracic, or sinus pressures
- Current or recent (< 3 months) use of cardiovascular or psychotropic medications
- Diagnosed psychotic disorders
- Current participation in therapy
- Recent initiation of mind-body practice
- Current major illness or injury
- Regular use of personal tracking devices to monitor sleep, heart rate, activity, or related physiological data.
Location
- UCLA School of Nursing, Factor Bldg, 700 Tiverton Dr
Los Angeles California 90095 United States
Lead Scientist at UCLA
- Paul Macey, PhD
Professor, Nursing Dept., Nursing. Authored (or co-authored) 141 research publications
Details
- Status
- accepting new patients by invitation only
- Start Date
- Completion Date
- (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University of California, Los Angeles
- ID
- NCT06920407
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Participants
- Expecting 150 study participants
- Last Updated