The Effect of Coffee Consumption on Balance, University Students
Summary
NIH registered an observational study (NCT07540559) investigating the effects of daily coffee consumption on balance performance in healthy university students. Participants will be categorized by habitual caffeine intake and assessed using standardized clinical balance tests. The study focuses on whether caffeine influences neuromuscular control, reaction time, and postural stability.
What changed
NIH registered a new observational study (NCT07540559) titled "The Effect of Coffee Consumption on Balance" on ClinicalTrials.gov. The study will recruit healthy university students and categorize participants by habitual caffeine intake levels before assessing balance performance using standardized clinical tests. Conditions under study include postural balance and coffee consumption exposure.
Compliance and legal professionals should note this is a research registry entry with no regulatory obligations. Researchers conducting similar observational studies on caffeine and motor function should ensure registration on ClinicalTrials.gov if applicable.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
The Effect of Coffee Consumption on Balance
Observational NCT07540559 Kind: OBSERVATIONAL Apr 20, 2026
Abstract
This study aims to investigate the effects of daily coffee consumption on balance performance in healthy university students. Caffeine is a widely consumed psychoactive substance that may influence neuromuscular control, reaction time, and postural stability. Participants will be categorized based on their habitual caffeine intake levels, and balance performance will be assessed using standardized clinical tests. The results are expected to contribute to the understanding of the relationship between caffeine consumption and balance performance.
Conditions: Balanced, Postural; Defect, Coffee Consumption
Interventions: Daily coffee consumption (self-reported exposure)
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