Sakkas Giorgos K, Mulligan Kathleen, Dasilva Makani, Doyle Julie W, Khatami Hootan, Schleich Thomas, Kent-Braun Jane A, Schambelan Morris
Department of Medicine, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.
PLoS One. 2009;4(2):e4605. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004605. Epub 2009 Feb 26.
Progressive resistance exercise training (PRT) improves physical functioning in patients with HIV infection. Creatine supplementation can augment the benefits derived from training in athletes and improve muscle function in patients with muscle wasting. The objective of this study was to determine whether creatine supplementation augments the effects of PRT on muscle strength, energetics, and body composition in HIV-infected patients.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: This is a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled, clinical research center-based, outpatient study in San Francisco. 40 HIV-positive men (20 creatine, 20 placebo) enrolled in a 14-week study. Subjects were randomly assigned to receive creatine monohydrate or placebo for 14 weeks. Treatment began with a loading dose of 20 g/day or an equivalent number of placebo capsules for 5 days, followed by maintenance dosing of 4.8 g/day or placebo. Beginning at week 2 and continuing to week 14, all subjects underwent thrice-weekly supervised resistance exercise while continuing on the assigned study medication (with repeated 6-week cycles of loading and maintenance). The main outcome measurements included muscle strength (one repetition maximum), energetics ((31)P magnetic resonance spectroscopy), composition and size (magnetic resonance imaging), as well as total body composition (dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry). Thirty-three subjects completed the study (17 creatine, 16 placebo). Strength increased in all 8 muscle groups studied following PRT, but this increase was not augmented by creatine supplementation (average increase 44 vs. 42%, difference 2%, 95% CI -9.5% to 13.9%) in creatine and placebo, respectively). There were no differences between groups in changes in muscle energetics. Thigh muscle cross-sectional area increased following resistance exercise, with no additive effect of creatine. Lean body mass (LBM) increased to a significantly greater extent with creatine. CONCLUSIONS / SIGNIFICANCE: Resistance exercise improved muscle size, strength and function in HIV-infected men. While creatine supplementation produced a greater increase in LBM, it did not augment the robust increase in strength derived from PRT.
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00484627.
渐进性抗阻运动训练(PRT)可改善HIV感染患者的身体机能。补充肌酸可增强运动员训练的益处,并改善肌肉萎缩患者的肌肉功能。本研究的目的是确定补充肌酸是否能增强PRT对HIV感染患者肌肉力量、能量代谢和身体成分的影响。
方法/主要发现:这是一项在旧金山临床研究中心进行的随机、双盲、安慰剂对照的门诊研究。40名HIV阳性男性(20名服用肌酸,20名服用安慰剂)参与了一项为期14周的研究。受试者被随机分配接受14周的一水肌酸或安慰剂治疗。治疗开始时,服用20克/天的负荷剂量或等量的安慰剂胶囊,持续5天,随后维持剂量为4.8克/天或安慰剂。从第2周开始并持续到第14周,所有受试者每周进行三次有监督的抗阻运动,同时继续服用指定的研究药物(重复6周的负荷和维持周期)。主要结局指标包括肌肉力量(一次重复最大值)、能量代谢(磷-31磁共振波谱)、成分和大小(磁共振成像)以及全身成分(双能X线吸收法)。33名受试者完成了研究(17名服用肌酸,16名服用安慰剂)。PRT后,所有8个研究的肌肉群力量均增加,但补充肌酸并未增强这种增加(肌酸组和安慰剂组的平均增加分别为44%和42%,差异为2%,95%CI为-9.5%至13.9%)。两组之间肌肉能量代谢的变化没有差异。抗阻运动后大腿肌肉横截面积增加,肌酸没有附加作用。服用肌酸后,去脂体重(LBM)增加幅度更大。结论/意义:抗阻运动改善了HIV感染男性的肌肉大小、力量和功能。虽然补充肌酸使LBM有更大的增加,但它并未增强PRT带来的显著力量增加。
ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00484627。