Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
Official title:
Extreme Exercise and Energy Expenditure (4E) Study
The goal of this clinical trial is to provide evidence, through an extreme exercise prescription (1,144 km of road cycling on seven consecutive days), that weight loss is not the appropriate outcome to evaluate the effects of exercise on abdominal adiposity and ectopic fat depots (e.g. liver fat and epi/pericardial fat) in eleven recreational middle-aged male cyclists (aged 50 to 66 years) without symptoms of cardiovascular disease. The main questions it aims to answer are: - If energy intake is substantially increased to compensate energy expenditure and prevent weight loss following an extreme exercise prescription, will significant changes in body composition and body fat distribution be observed? - Will these changes translate into improvements in the cardiometabolic health profile even in the absence of weight loss? Participants will be asked to partake in several evaluations: fasting plasma lipoprotein-lipid profile and inflammation markers, glycated hemoglobin, cardiorespiratory fitness, submaximal exercise test including measurement of energy expenditure, resting and exercise blood pressure and heart rate, evaluation of regional adiposity, liver fat content, epi/pericardial fat, nutritional quality, and level of physical activity. After baseline evaluations, participants will be asked to alternately bike 208 km and 104 km per day on a pre-specified course for seven consecutive days. They will be accompanied during each of the seven bike rides by research professionals in a recreational vehicle. Participants' weight, body composition and waist circumference will be measured under standardized conditions in the morning after an overnight fast and after the exercise. Their heart rate will be continuously monitored, and participants will wear accelerometers to estimate their daily exercise-related energy expenditure. Foods and fluids will be provided to participants and recorded. At the end of the 1,144 km/ 7-days bike ride, baseline evaluations will be repeated with the exception of the maximal exercise treadmill test, nutritional quality, and level of physical activity. To facilitate the conduct of the protocol, the eleven participants will be evaluated and followed in two distinct groups.
Although there is robust evidence that a physically active lifestyle including regular leisure time physical activity and exercise (>150 min per week of moderate to vigorous exercise per week) is associated with a reduced mortality risk and improved cardiometabolic health, some scientists have promoted the notion (which has certainly been taken up by the lay press) that if one wants to lose weight, focus should be placed on caloric restriction rather than on exercise. Several academic debates have been held on this issue which have left some health professionals and the public confused and perplexed. The investigators' research group has been active in this area on several fronts. First, the investigators have pioneered the notion that in cardiovascular and "metabolic" medicine, the health risk of overweight and obesity was not appropriately assessed by an index based on body weight (body mass index, which is expressed in kg/m^2). For instance, using imaging technology (computed tomography), the investigators were among the first, more than 30 years ago, to begin to extensively study regional body fat distribution, showing that excess visceral adipose tissue accumulation was more closely related to an atherogenic and diabetogenic cardiometabolic risk profile than excess body weight or total body fat. As sedentary individuals with a diet of poor nutritional value (rich in processed fat and added sugar - promoting preferential visceral fat deposition) are also often characterized by a lower muscle mass and by high levels of abdominal visceral fat, several lifestyle intervention studies that the investigators and others have conducted in sedentary males with visceral obesity have shown that with regular exercise, one could lose visceral adipose tissue while gaining muscle mass, which would lead to trivial or sometimes no changes in body weight. Thus, if body composition is altered by an energy deficit produced by regular exercise, the investigators have proposed that weight loss may sometime be misleading as an outcome as it may not always reflect favorable changes in body composition (muscle mass increasing) and in visceral adiposity and levels of ectopic fat (decreasing). On that basis, the investigators have proposed that changes in waist circumference could be more useful than body weight loss in the evaluation of the benefits of a lifestyle modification program involving regular endurance exercise such as brisk walking, jogging, or biking. For instance, the investigators have previously reported that waist circumference was rather sensitive to lifestyle changes involving regular physical activity/exercise. Accordingly, lifestyle intervention studies have shown that a reduction of 4 cm in waist girth was predictive of a 58% reduction in the risk of developing type 2 diabetes among individuals who were initially characterized by abdominal obesity and glucose intolerance. Thus, there is a need to propose a paradigm shift among health professionals to evaluate the impact of lifestyle intervention programs involving physical activity/exercise in high-risk overweight obese individuals with visceral obesity: Weight loss is no longer the optimal or most clinically relevant outcome - losses of visceral adiposity and ectopic fat may be more relevant clinically. In 2015, a member of the investigators' team was asked to write an editorial on a spectacular study which provided very relevant data to the debate about diet vs. exercise and weight loss. In that impressive exercise study, recreational middle-aged cyclists were required to bike 2,700 km over 14 days and asked to try to match their energy intake to their very large energy expenditure, the objective being not to lose weight over the course of the intervention. Thus, the daily exercise "prescription" was huge as the authors wanted to test the ability of these elderly and fit recreational cyclists to match their energy intake to their energy expenditure. The most striking and important finding of this unusual study is that despite the huge energy expenditure associated with the 2,700 km bike expedition, participants did not lose weight. However, such lack of change in body weight was completely misleading in terms of energy balance and changes in body composition. Indeed, the cyclists lost 2.2 kg of body fat while gaining 2.5 kg of fat-free mass, a remarkable finding considering that such changes were observed over a period of only two weeks. Results of this study provide additional evidence that body weight is a poor outcome to assess the effect of a physical activity/exercise program. In the investigators' previously published exercise training studies, a common observation has been the disconnect between changes in body weight and changes in body composition, the latter being sometime observed even in the absence of weight loss. As weight poorly tracks changes in body composition induced by exercise, no wonder why exercise is indeed perceived as not being helpful to lose weight by some health professionals. The investigators propose that body weight is a misleading outcome when comes the time to evaluate the clinical benefits of exercise in individuals with overweight/obese. One remaining and clinically important issue remains to be addressed regarding the effects of a large volume of exercise not inducing weight loss: to what extent substantial changes in visceral/ectopic fat could have been observed had imaging data been available? In addition, it would have been interesting for the 2,700 km bike intervention study to report changes in waist circumference, this metric being more sensitive to regular exercise than body weight. In the investigators' previous intervention studies, it has been their experience to find participants losing quite a bit of visceral fat and dropping their waistline by several centimeters, while not losing any body weight. Thus, on the basis of the above observations, the investigators put forward the hypotheses that: 1. a very large volume of exercise (1,144 km of bicycle performed for 7 consecutive days) will induce major changes in body composition and in levels of visceral adipose tissue/ectopic fat in a sample of middle-aged recreational cyclists who will be asked to match their energy intake to their very large energy expenditure during the course of the one-week extreme exercise intervention. Thus, in a study where, by design, no weight loss is planned nor wanted, the investigators expect to see major changes in body composition (slight increase in muscle mass and substantial reductions in the size of visceral adipose tissue and ectopic fat depots); 2. changes in levels of visceral adipose tissue and ectopic fat will be better reflected by changes in waist circumference - which should decrease in the absence of body weight loss. The investigators recognize that this is an extreme exercise prescription that has little relevance to public health. However, results of this study will be very important in shedding light on the importance of shifting our attention from body weight loss to other, more clinically relevant fat depots. Thus, the purpose of the study is to provide evidence, through an extreme exercise prescription, that weight loss is not the appropriate outcome to evaluate the effects of exercise on visceral adiposity and ectopic fat depots (e.g. liver fat and epi/pericardial fat) which will likely be mobilized to a very significant extent in only one week. ;
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