Rocha Joel, Paxman Jenny, Dalton Caroline, Winter Edward, Broom David
Department of Physiology, School of Medicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Trinity College Dublin, D2, Ireland.
Food and Nutrition Group, Sheffield Business School, Sheffield Hallam University, S1 1WB, UK.
Appetite. 2015 Jun;89:183-91. doi: 10.1016/j.appet.2015.02.005. Epub 2015 Feb 12.
This study examined the effects of an acute bout of exercise of low-intensity on food intake and energy expenditure over four days in women taking oral contraceptives. Twenty healthy, active (n = 10) and inactive (n = 10) pre-menopausal women taking oral contraceptives completed two conditions (exercise and control), in a randomised, crossover fashion. The exercise experimental day involved cycling for one hour at an intensity equivalent to 50% of maximum oxygen uptake and two hours of rest. The control condition comprised three hours of rest. Participants arrived at the laboratory fasted overnight; breakfast was standardised and an ad libitum pasta lunch was consumed on each experimental day. Participants kept a food diary to measure food intake and wore an Actiheart to measure energy expenditure for the remainder of the experimental days and over the subsequent 3 days. There was a condition effect for absolute energy intake (exercise vs.
3363 ± 668 kJ vs. 3035 ± 752 kJ; p = 0.033, d = 0.49) and relative energy intake (exercise vs.
2019 ± 746 kJ vs. 2710 ± 712 kJ; p <0.001, d = -1.00) at the ad libitum lunch. There were no significant differences in energy intake over the four days in active participants and there was a suppression of energy intake on the first day after the exercise experimental day compared with the same day of the control condition in inactive participants (mean difference = -1974 kJ; 95% CI -1048 to -2900 kJ, p = 0.002, d = -0.89). There was a group effect (p = 0.001, d = 1.63) for free-living energy expenditure, indicating that active participants expended more energy than inactive participants during this period. However, there were no compensatory changes in daily physical activity energy expenditure. These results support the use of low-intensity aerobic exercise as a method to induce a short-term negative energy balance in inactive women taking oral contraceptives.
本研究考察了一次低强度急性运动对口服避孕药女性在四天内食物摄入量和能量消耗的影响。二十名健康的、处于绝经前期且正在服用口服避孕药的女性(其中10名活跃,10名不活跃)以随机交叉方式完成了两种状态(运动和对照)的实验。运动实验日包括以相当于最大摄氧量50%的强度骑行一小时以及休息两小时。对照状态包括休息三小时。参与者隔夜空腹抵达实验室;早餐标准化,每个实验日食用一顿随意的意大利面午餐。参与者记录食物日记以测量食物摄入量,并佩戴Actiheart设备在实验剩余天数及随后三天测量能量消耗。随意午餐时的绝对能量摄入量存在状态效应(运动组与对照组:3363±668千焦对3035±752千焦;p = 0.033,d = 0.49)以及相对能量摄入量存在状态效应(运动组与对照组:2019±746千焦对2710±712千焦;p <0.001,d = -1.00)。活跃参与者在四天内的能量摄入量无显著差异,与不活跃参与者对照状态的同一天相比,不活跃参与者在运动实验日后第一天的能量摄入量受到抑制(平均差值=-1974千焦;95%置信区间-1048至-2900千焦,p = 0.002,d = -0.89)。自由生活能量消耗存在组效应(p = 0.001,d = 1.63),表明在此期间活跃参与者比不活跃参与者消耗更多能量。然而,日常身体活动能量消耗没有补偿性变化。这些结果支持将低强度有氧运动作为一种在服用口服避孕药的不活跃女性中诱导短期负能量平衡的方法。