Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO.
Department of Medical Pharmacology and Physiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2019 May;51(5):995-1005. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000001892.
Physical inactivity is associated with disruptions in glucose metabolism and energy balance, whereas energy restriction may blunt these adverse manifestations. During hypocaloric feeding, higher-protein intake maintains lean mass which is an important component of metabolic health. This study determined whether mild energy restriction preserves glycemic control during physical inactivity and whether this preservation is more effectively achieved with a higher-protein diet.
Ten adults (24 ± 1 yr) consumed a control (64% carbohydrate, 20% fat, 16% protein) and higher-protein diet (50% carbohydrate, 20% fat, 30% protein) during two 10-d inactivity periods (>10,000 → ~5000 steps per day) in a randomized crossover design. Energy intake was decreased by ~400 kcal·d to account for reduced energy expenditure associated with inactivity. A subset of subjects (n = 5) completed 10 d of inactivity while consuming 35% excess of their basal energy requirements, which served as a positive control condition (overfeeding+inactivity).
Daily steps were decreased from 12,154 ± 308 to 4275 ± 269 steps per day (P < 0.05) which was accompanied by reduced V˙O2max (-1.8 ± 0.7 mL·kg·min, P < 0.05), independent of diet conditions. No disruptions in fasting or postprandial glucose, insulin, and nonesterified fatty acids in response to 75 g of oral glucose were observed after inactivity for both diet conditions (P > 0.05). Overfeeding+inactivity increased body weight, body fat, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance, and 2-h postprandial glucose and insulin concentrations (P < 0.05), despite no changes in lipid concentrations.
We show that independent of diet (normal vs higher-protein), mild energy restriction preserves metabolic function during short-term inactivity in healthy subjects. That is, metabolic deterioration with inactivity only manifests in the setting of energy surplus.
体力活动不足与葡萄糖代谢和能量平衡紊乱有关,而能量限制可能会削弱这些不利表现。在低热量喂养期间,较高的蛋白质摄入可维持瘦体重,这是代谢健康的重要组成部分。本研究旨在确定轻度能量限制是否在体力活动不足期间保持血糖控制,以及较高蛋白质饮食是否更有效地实现这种保护。
10 名成年人(24 ± 1 岁)在随机交叉设计中进行了两次 10 天的不活动期(每天的步数从>10000 步减少到~5000 步),分别摄入对照饮食(64%碳水化合物、20%脂肪、16%蛋白质)和高蛋白饮食(50%碳水化合物、20%脂肪、30%蛋白质)。能量摄入减少了约 400 千卡,以弥补与不活动相关的能量消耗减少。一组受试者(n=5)在摄入基础能量需求的 35%超额(过度喂养+不活动)的情况下完成了 10 天的不活动。
每天的步数从 12154 ± 308 步减少到 4275 ± 269 步/天(P < 0.05),这伴随着 V˙O2max 的降低(-1.8 ± 0.7 mL·kg·min,P < 0.05),与饮食条件无关。两种饮食条件下,不活动后对 75 g 口服葡萄糖的空腹和餐后血糖、胰岛素和非酯化脂肪酸均无明显变化(P > 0.05)。过度喂养+不活动导致体重、体脂肪、胰岛素抵抗评估的稳态模型和 2 小时餐后血糖和胰岛素浓度增加(P < 0.05),尽管脂质浓度没有变化。
我们表明,无论饮食(正常饮食与高蛋白饮食)如何,轻度能量限制在健康受试者的短期不活动期间均可维持代谢功能。也就是说,只有在能量过剩的情况下,不活动才会导致代谢恶化。