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N/A N=23 Other

Validation of a Digital Twin Performing Strength Training

Healthy

Enrolled (actual)
23
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
May 2026
Primary outcome: Primary: Stop-and-go (SAG) Ability — -0.04 Time (s)

Study Design & Population

Study type
Interventional
Phase
N/A
Interventions
Strength training session (Other)
Age
Adult · 20+ yrs
Sex
All
Sponsor
Silvio Lorenzetti
Primary completion
Oct 2025

Outcome Measures

OutcomeResultp-value
PRIMARY
Stop-and-go (SAG) Ability
-0.04
PRIMARY
20 m Sprint Performance
-0.01
SECONDARY
Change in Jump Performance CMJ
0.2
SECONDARY
Changes in Jump Performance SJ
1.1

Summary

Background: Muscular strength training interventions have long been a cornerstone in the prevention, non-surgical management and rehabilitation of the entire spectrum of musculoskeletal injuries and diseases. The key goal of strength training, especially during rehabilitation, is to regain healthy musculoskeletal function. Yet, there remains a fundamental lack of understanding with regards to the relationship between subject-specific musculoskeletal biomechanics (i.e. multi-body dynamics function) and different types of strength training interventions because of limitations in assessing these parameters outside the research setting. Thus, clinicians, physiotherapists and coaches continue making training recommendations based on subjective and generalised guidelines, with ineffective or possibly harmful consequences for individual patients and athletes. Goal: This project aims to advance strength training guidelines and monitoring of training safety and efficiency by means of subject-specific anatomically-based modelling, biomechanical analysis of musculoskeletal function and mobile monitoring of training volume and muscular fatigue in the athletic and recreational setting. Method: For validation purposes, the investigators will conduct an 8-week intervention study in healthy volunteers with strength training of the key muscle-tendon groups associated with knee joint stability and relate the changes in musculoskeletal and biomechanical parameters to the training-specific parameters and muscular fatigue from mobile monitoring through correlation analysis. Relevance: In Switzerland, more than 1.3 Mio people are members of a fitness center. Strength training is not only a cornerstone in the maintenance of fitness and rehabilitation from musculoskeletal injuries and diseases as the most frequently reported health issues.

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Healthy participants; and
  • Age 20-40 years old; and
  • No acute or chronic musculoskeletal symptoms or pain; and
  • Experience with strength training (at least 1-year strength training experience with one training session per week or more); and
  • Familiar with strength exercises of key muscles associated with knee joint stability.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Acute or chronic musculoskeletal pain; and/or
  • Musculoskeletal surgery within the last 12 months; and/or
  • Ongoing rehabilitation or treatment of musculoskeletal complaints or injury; and/or
  • Neuromusculoskeletal disease (e.g. cerebral palsy); and/or
  • Pregnancy.
View full record on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04849923). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.

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