Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC 27517, USA.
Grand Forks Human Nutrition Research Center, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Grand Forks, ND 58203, USA.
Nutrients. 2023 Sep 12;15(18):3948. doi: 10.3390/nu15183948.
Active-duty military personnel are subjected to sustained periods of energy deficit during combat and training, leaving them susceptible to detrimental reductions in body weight. The importance of adequate dietary protein intake during periods of intense physical training is well established, where previous research has primarily focused on muscle protein synthesis, muscle recovery, and physical performance. Research on how protein intake may influence body weight regulation in this population is lacking; therefore, the objective of this review was to evaluate the role of dietary protein in body weight regulation among active-duty military during an energy deficit. A literature search based on fixed inclusion and exclusion criteria was performed. English language peer-reviewed journal articles from inception to 3 June 2023 were selected for extraction and quality assessment. Eight studies were identified with outcomes described narratively. The study duration ranged from eight days to six months. Protein was directly provided to participants in all studies except for one. Three studies supplied additional protein via supplementation. The Downs and Black Checklist was used to assess study quality. Five studies were classified as good, two as fair, and one as excellent. All studies reported mean weight loss following energy deficit: the most severe was 4.0 kg. Protein dose during energy deficit varied from 0.5 g/kg/day to 2.4 g/kg/day. Six studies reported mean reductions in fat mass, with the largest being 4.5 kg. Four studies reported mean reductions in fat-free mass, while two studies reported an increase. Results support the recommendation that greater than 0.8 g/kg/day is necessary to mitigate the impact of energy deficit on a decline in lean body mass, while intakes up to 1.6 g/kg/day may be preferred. However, exact recommendations cannot be inferred as the severity and duration of energy deficit varied across studies. Longer and larger investigations are needed to elucidate protein's role during energy deficit in active-duty military.
现役军人在作战和训练期间会持续处于能量不足的状态,这使他们容易出现体重下降的情况。在高强度体能训练期间,摄入足够的膳食蛋白质的重要性已得到充分证实,此前的研究主要集中在肌肉蛋白质合成、肌肉恢复和身体表现上。关于蛋白质摄入如何影响该人群的体重调节的研究还很缺乏;因此,本综述的目的是评估在能量不足的情况下,膳食蛋白质在现役军人的体重调节中的作用。基于固定的纳入和排除标准进行了文献检索。选择了从开始到 2023 年 6 月 3 日的英文同行评审期刊文章进行提取和质量评估。确定了八项研究,其结果以叙述的方式进行了描述。研究持续时间从八天到六个月不等。除了一项研究外,所有研究都直接向参与者提供蛋白质。三项研究通过补充剂提供额外的蛋白质。使用 Downs 和 Black 清单评估研究质量。五项研究被评为良好,两项为中等,一项为优秀。所有研究都报告了能量不足后的平均体重减轻:最严重的是 4.0 公斤。能量不足期间的蛋白质剂量从 0.5 克/公斤/天到 2.4 克/公斤/天不等。六项研究报告了平均脂肪量减少,最大减少量为 4.5 公斤。四项研究报告了平均去脂体重减少,而两项研究报告了增加。结果支持了这样的建议,即摄入大于 0.8 克/公斤/天是必要的,可以减轻能量不足对瘦体重下降的影响,而摄入高达 1.6 克/公斤/天可能是首选。然而,由于研究之间能量不足的严重程度和持续时间不同,无法推断出确切的建议。需要进行更长和更大规模的调查,以阐明蛋白质在现役军人能量不足期间的作用。