The modern warfighter faces numerous physiological challenges including sleep deprivation, sustained intense physical activity, and caloric restriction, the combined effects of which may result in the loss of lean body mass and decreased physical performance. Dietary interventions may help preserve lean body mass and facilitate recovery from periods of intense physical demand. For example, dietary strategies that increase amino acid availability have been shown to stimulate protein synthesis in skeletal muscle following resistance exercise. Because military tasks also incorporate endurance exercise components, studies regarding the effects of increasing dietary amino acids following endurance exercise are warranted. The objectives of this study are to characterize the effect of endurance exercise on protein synthesis and breakdown as well as the ability of an essential amino acid supplement to influence skeletal muscle protein metabolism and its cellular and molecular regulation following endurance exercise.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
23
10 Gram Essential Amino Acid solutions with different leucine contents consumed during two identical endurance exercise trials
60 minute endurance exercise session
Tufts University
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
US Army Research Institute of Environmental Medicine
Natick, Massachusetts, United States
Change in muscle protein synthesis after exercise or exercise with amino acid supplementation.
Time frame: An average change over a 210 minute recovery period from a 60 minute endurance exercise session
Change in intracellular signaling after exercise or exercise with amino acid supplementation.
Time frame: At 30 minutes and 210 minutes after a 60 minute endurance exercise session
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