The purpose of this study is to determine whether a nutritional supplement with an amino acid called leucine along with resistance exercise are effective in the improvement of muscle strength and quality of life in elderly people.
Physiological aging is accompanied by functional loss and changes in different organs, including the skeletal muscle, with a progressive reduction in muscle mass. This is called physiological sarcopenia of the elderly. In any population of autonomous individuals over 65 years, a proportion between 3% and 32% depending on age, meets the criteria of the so-called Frailty Syndrome. Frailty is characterized by a decrease in reserves and resistance to aggression, conferring increased vulnerability, disability and poor vital prognosis. A feature of the Frailty Syndrome is the potential reversibility of many of the elements at the initial stages of frailty. Currently, available treatment for frailty is limited. One of the tools should be the prevention of sarcopenia, where nutritional treatment and exercise have a vital role. Protein synthesis in aged muscle can be improved by increasing leucine concentration above physiological levels by a higher intake. Regarding exercise, progressive resistance training is one of the interventions that have shown better results in the increase of mass and muscle strength in elderly people. The hypothesis raises the possibility that an intervention consisting of a leucine supplement along with progressive resistance training, is superior to the same training program and a placebo in improving muscle strength and quality of life in elderly people.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
30
10 g of leucine per day, during 12 weeks.
10 g of maltodextrin per day, during 12 weeks.
Progressive resistance exercise program 4 days a week, during 12 weeks.
Nutrition and Dietetics Unit, Hospital Clínic de Barcelona
Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain
Muscle strength.
Time frame: Baseline, 4 weeks, 12 weeks
Functionality
Time frame: Baseline, 4 weeks, 12 weeks
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