Aucouturier Julien, Baker Julien S, Duché Pascale
Laboratory of Exercise Biology (BAPS), Auvergne University, Clermont-Ferrand, France.
Sports Med. 2008;38(3):213-38. doi: 10.2165/00007256-200838030-00003.
During exercise, the contribution of fat and carbohydrate to energy expenditure is largely modulated by the intensity of exercise. Age, a short- or long-term diet enriched in carbohydrate or fat substrate stores, training and gender are other factors that have also been found to affect this balance. These factors have been extensively studied in adults from the perspective of improving performance in athletes, or from a health perspective in people with diseases. During the last decade, lifestyle changes associated with high-energy diets rich in lipid and reduced physical activity have contributed to the increase in childhood obesity. This lifestyle change has emerged as a serious health problem favouring the early development of cardiovascular diseases, insulin resistance or type 2 diabetes mellitus. Increasing physical activity levels in young people is important to increase energy expenditure and promote muscle oxidative capacity. Therefore, it is surprising that the regulation of balance between carbohydrate and lipid use during exercise has received much less attention in children than in adults. In this review, we have focused on the factors that affect carbohydrate and lipid metabolism during exercise and have identified areas that may be relevant in explaining the higher contribution of lipid to energy expenditure in children when compared with adults. Low muscle glycogen content is possibly associated with a low activity of glycolytic enzymes and high oxidative capacity, while lower levels of sympathoadrenal hormones are likely to favour lipid metabolism in children. Changes in energetic metabolism occurring during adolescence are also dependent on pubertal events with an increase in testosterone in boys and estrogen and progesterone in girls. The profound effects of ovarian hormones on carbohydrate and fat metabolism along with their effects on oxidative enzymes could explain that differences in substrate metabolism have not always been observed between girls and women. Finally, although the regulatory mechanisms of fat and carbohydrate balance during exercise are quite well identified, there are a lack of data specific to children and most of the evidences reported in this review were drawn from studies in adults. Isotope tracer techniques and nuclear magnetic resonance will allow non-invasive investigation of the metabolism of the different substrate sources in skeletal muscle.
运动期间,脂肪和碳水化合物对能量消耗的贡献在很大程度上受运动强度调节。年龄、短期或长期富含碳水化合物或脂肪底物储备的饮食、训练以及性别也是已发现会影响这种平衡的其他因素。从提高运动员成绩的角度,或从疾病患者健康的角度,这些因素在成年人中已得到广泛研究。在过去十年中,与富含脂质的高能量饮食及体力活动减少相关的生活方式改变导致儿童肥胖率上升。这种生活方式的改变已成为一个严重的健康问题,有利于心血管疾病、胰岛素抵抗或2型糖尿病的早期发展。增加年轻人的体力活动水平对于增加能量消耗和提高肌肉氧化能力很重要。因此,令人惊讶的是,与成年人相比,运动期间碳水化合物和脂质利用平衡的调节在儿童中受到的关注要少得多。在本综述中,我们重点关注了运动期间影响碳水化合物和脂质代谢的因素,并确定了一些可能与解释儿童与成年人相比脂质对能量消耗贡献更高相关的领域。低肌肉糖原含量可能与糖酵解酶活性低和氧化能力高有关,而较低水平的交感肾上腺激素可能有利于儿童的脂质代谢。青春期发生的能量代谢变化也取决于青春期事件,男孩体内睾酮增加,女孩体内雌激素和孕酮增加。卵巢激素对碳水化合物和脂肪代谢的深远影响及其对氧化酶的作用可以解释为什么在女孩和女性之间并不总是观察到底物代谢的差异。最后,尽管运动期间脂肪和碳水化合物平衡的调节机制已相当明确,但缺乏针对儿童的具体数据,且本综述中报道的大多数证据均来自对成年人的研究。同位素示踪技术和核磁共振将允许对骨骼肌中不同底物来源的代谢进行非侵入性研究。