Myers Candice A, Johnson William D, Earnest Conrad P, Rood Jennifer C, Tudor-Locke Catrine, Johannsen Neil M, Cocreham Shannon, Harris Melissa, Church Timothy S, Martin Corby K
Pennington Biomedical Research Center, 6400 Perkins Road, Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA.
Trials. 2014 Jun 7;15:212. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-15-212.
Weight loss induced only by exercise is frequently less than expected, possibly because of compensatory changes in energy intake and/or energy expenditure. The purpose of the Examination of Mechanisms (E-MECHANIC) of Exercise-Induced Weight Compensation trial is to examine whether increased energy intake and/or reduced spontaneous activity or energy expenditure (outside of structured exercise) account for the less than expected, exercise-associated weight loss.
METHODS/DESIGN: E-MECHANIC is a three-arm, 6-month randomized (1:1:1) controlled trial. The two intervention arms are exercise doses that reflect current recommendations for (1) general health (8 kcal/kg body weight per week (8 KKW), about 900 kcal/wk) and (2) weight loss (20 KKW, about 2,250 kcal/wk). The third arm, a nonexercise control group, will receive health information only. The sample will include a combined total of 198sedentary, overweight or obese (body mass index: ≥25 kg/m² to ≤45 kg/m²) men and women ages 18 to 65 years. The exercise dose will be supervised and tightly controlled in an exercise training laboratory. The primary outcome variables are energy intake, which will be measured using doubly labeled water (adjusted for change in energy stores) and laboratory-based food intake tests, and the discrepancy between expected weight loss and observed weight loss. Secondary outcomes include changes in resting metabolic rate (adjusted for change in body mass), activity levels (excluding structured exercise) and body composition. In an effort to guide the development of future interventions, the participants will be behaviorally phenotyped and defined as those who do compensate (that is, fail to lose the amount of weight expected) or do not compensate (that is, lose the amount of weight expected or more).
In this study, we will attempt to identify underlying mechanisms to explain why exercise elicits less weight loss than expected. This information will guide the development of interventions to increase exercise-induced weight loss and maximize weight loss retention and related health benefits.
ClinicalTrials.gov ID: NCT01264406 (registration date: 20 December 2010).
仅通过运动导致的体重减轻通常低于预期,这可能是由于能量摄入和/或能量消耗的代偿性变化。运动诱导体重代偿机制研究(E-MECHANIC)试验的目的是研究能量摄入增加和/或自发活动或能量消耗减少(结构化运动之外)是否导致了低于预期的与运动相关的体重减轻。
方法/设计:E-MECHANIC是一项三臂、为期6个月的随机(1:1:1)对照试验。两个干预组的运动剂量分别反映当前关于(1)一般健康(每周8千卡/千克体重(8 KKW),约900千卡/周)和(2)体重减轻(20 KKW,约2250千卡/周)的建议。第三组为非运动对照组,仅接受健康信息。样本将包括总共198名久坐不动、超重或肥胖(体重指数:≥25千克/平方米至≤45千克/平方米)的18至65岁男性和女性。运动剂量将在运动训练实验室中进行监督和严格控制。主要结局变量是能量摄入,将使用双标记水(根据能量储存变化进行调整)和基于实验室的食物摄入量测试进行测量,以及预期体重减轻与观察到的体重减轻之间的差异。次要结局包括静息代谢率的变化(根据体重变化进行调整)、活动水平(不包括结构化运动)和身体成分。为了指导未来干预措施的制定,参与者将进行行为表型分析,并分为那些确实发生代偿(即未能减轻预期体重)或未发生代偿(即减轻了预期体重或更多)的人。
在本研究中,我们将试图确定潜在机制,以解释为什么运动引起的体重减轻低于预期。这些信息将指导制定干预措施,以增加运动诱导的体重减轻,并最大限度地保持体重减轻及相关健康益处。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT01264406(注册日期:2010年12月20日)。