Dietary Modification Clinical Trial
Official title:
Testing of Micellar Casein, Blended Micellar Casein and Native Whey, Versus Native Whey to Determine Post-ingestion Aminoacidemia, Glycemia, and Insulinemia in Young Adult Men
The importance of protein in nutrition is momentous to ones health. Dietary proteins are essentially nutritional because they contain amino acids, which the body uses to build its own proteins, as well as other molecules that are essential for life. Protein when consumed, travels through your digestive system and is absorbed. They then enter the blood for transport to bodily tissues, and therefore, can be detected by blood sampling. There are differing amounts of each amino acid found in different types of protein supplements. Certain amino acids (the essential amino acids) are helping in stimulating muscle growth and helping to maintain muscle mass and function. It is important to understand how quickly these amino acids can be detected in your blood as well as how they affect blood glucose (blood sugar) and insulin activity. Understanding the effects of protein type on changes in levels of blood amino acids, glucose and insulin will provide helpful insight for the suggestion of supplement use.
The importance of protein in nutrition is momentous to ones health. Dietary proteins are
essentially nutritional because of their constituent amino acids, which the body uses to
synthesize its own proteins, as well as nitrogen-containing molecules that are essential for
life. The Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) for daily protein intake in healthy adults is
0.8 g/kgBW/day. Younger individuals who participate in recreational or competitive
activities, however, often attempt to go beyond the RDA by using protein supplements to help
increase performance. For example, it was demonstrated that protein supplementation in
conjunction with an eight-week resistance-training program elicited greater improvements in
muscle hypertrophy and strength when compared to carbohydrate supplementation in untrained
men. There were 3.2 to 17.5% increases in muscle cross-sectional area of the quadriceps
femoris musculature and 14.5 to 30.3% strength gains in the leg extensors. Furthermore,
several expert groups have recently advocated that certain individuals, such as older
persons, should increase their daily intake to 1.0 to 1.5 g/kgBW/day to support the
preservation of muscle and function. Other conditions also place greater than normal demands
on amino acids, such as hypercatabolic stressed states, like that experienced by burn
patients who's muscle protein breakdown rate increases by impairment to inward transmembrane
transport of circulating blood amino acids. It was also found that an experimental enriched
protein "medical food" comprised of 27% of calories as total protein resulted in postprandial
increases in MPS rates for 5 hours by ∼33% (0.073 ± 0.023%∙h-1 to 0.097 ± 0.033%∙h-1) in
advanced cancer patients. Thus, continually reassessing new and innovative nutrient therapies
is necessary for extending the findings of existing studies after technological advances, and
for providing nutritional support-to-support health.
It is well known that dietary protein is a powerful transient stimulator of the muscle
protein synthetic rate (MPS) whereby changes in MPS in response to feeding may be regulated
by specific downstream target proteins of mammalian target of rapamycin signaling, such as
S6K1, rpS6, and eIF2B. A meal deficient in protein, however, does not increase the rate of
MPS because a rise in the bioavailability of amino acids does not occur. In addition, the
source of dietary proteins has been shown to impact postprandial blood levels of amino acids.
The concept that certain types of proteins are "fast acting" or "slow acting" has been shown
to affect the postprandial profile of amino acids appearing in the systemic circulation.
Native whey and micellar casein are both dairy proteins that contain a similar amount of
essential (EAA), but blood EAA levels increase faster and to a higher level after the
consumption of whey protein. Differences in gastric emptying, digestion and absorption
kinetics between micellar casein and native whey are suggested to be the underlying factors.
Nonetheless, micellar casein protein has been shown to protract MPS in humans. Despite the
significant amount of information gained with respect to both of these protein sources, the
effects of combinatorial formulations on the postprandial profile of amino acids appearing in
the blood is less well known. The purpose of the present study is to test a novel blend of
micellar casein combined with native whey to determine post-ingestion aminoacidemia,
glycemia, and insulinemia in young adult men.
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