Literature DB >> 6491764

Nitrogen balance in men with adequate and deficient energy intake at three levels of work.

K S Todd, G E Butterfield, D H Calloway.   

Abstract

Two studies were conducted to investigate the effects of mild exercise on nitrogen balance in men given diets supplying adequate or slightly limiting energy. In experiment A the diet supplied 91 mg N/kg body weight (0.57 g protein/kg, the FAO/WHO safe level of intake) as egg white; in experiment B the same source was used to provide the 1980 NRC-RDA for adult males, 128 mg N/kg body weight (0.8 g protein/kg). By adjusting energy intake and activity, periods of energy equilibrium and negative energy balance (-15%) were achieved at three levels of activity (X for exercise): no programmed work (0.85X), 1 hour of treadmill walking (1.0X) and 1 hour each of treadmill and cycle ergometry (1.15X). "True" nitrogen balance (TNbal) was more positive or less negative during periods of energy equilibrium as compared to those of energy deficit. This effect of energy balance on TNbal increased with physical activity. At the lower protein intake the mean difference in TNbal between the period of energy equilibrium and that of energy deficit at 1.0X was 0.19 g N/day (nonsignificant difference) and 0.54 g N/day at 1.15X. When protein intake was increased, the difference in TNbal between periods of equilibrium and deficit was significant at all levels of activity: 0.65 g N/day at 0.85X, 0.93 g N/day at 1.0X and 1.09 g N/day at 1.15X. Physical activity was anabolic when energy balance was maintained. In experiment A the addition of 1 hour of exercise (1.0X to 1.15X) spared 2.5 mg N/kg body weight; reducing activity by 1 hour (1.0X to 0.85X) cost 1.4 mg N/kg body weight. In experiment B, TNbal was more positive with increased activity (by 5.9 mg N/kg body weight) and more negative (by 11.5 mg N/kg body weight) when the men were sedentary. During periods of energy deficit, the anabolic effect of activity was also present, although less markedly. When activity increased from 1 to 2 hours in experiment A, TNbal improved by 2.1 mg N/kg body weight and in experiment B, by 3.5 mg N/kg body weight. Thus, circumstances of negative energy balance with adequate protein intake are better tolerated when the energy deficit is generated by physical activity than when it derives from reduced intake; the picture when protein intake is marginal requires further investigation.

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Year:  1984        PMID: 6491764     DOI: 10.1093/jn/114.11.2107

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Nutr        ISSN: 0022-3166            Impact factor:   4.798


  19 in total

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4.  Whole-body protein turnover response to short-term high-protein diets during weight loss: a randomized controlled trial.

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5.  Nitrogen balance in older individuals in energy balance depends on timing of protein intake.

Authors:  Leora Y Jordan; Edward L Melanson; Christopher L Melby; Matthew S Hickey; Benjamin F Miller
Journal:  J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci       Date:  2010-07-09       Impact factor: 6.053

6.  Long-term synthesis rates of skeletal muscle DNA and protein are higher during aerobic training in older humans than in sedentary young subjects but are not altered by protein supplementation.

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Review 8.  Aerobic exercise and resistance weight-training during weight reduction. Implications for obese persons and athletes.

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9.  Predicting metabolic adaptation, body weight change, and energy intake in humans.

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10.  Aerobic fitness does not modulate protein metabolism in response to increased exercise: a controlled trial.

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