Skeletal Muscle Clinical Trial
— MPSOfficial title:
The Effects of Different Protein and Amino Acid Supplements of Muscle Hypertrophy After 12 Weeks of Resistance Exercise in Untrained Men
Verified date | April 2018 |
Source | Auburn University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of L-leucine (LEU) or different protein supplements standardized to LEU (~3.0 g/serving) on changes in body composition, strength, and histological attributes in skeletal muscle and adipose tissue. Seventy-five untrained, college-aged males (mean±SE; age=21±1 yr, body mass=79.2±0.3 kg) were randomly assigned to an isocaloric, lipid-, and organoleptically-matched maltodextrin placebo (PLA, n=15), LEU (n=14), whey protein concentrate (WPC, n=17), whey protein hydrolysate (WPH, n=14), or soy protein concentrate (SPC, n=15) group. Participants performed whole-body resistance training three days per week for 12 weeks while consuming supplements twice daily. Skeletal muscle and subcutaneous (SQ) fat biopsies were obtained at baseline (T1) and ~72 h following the last day of training (T39). Tissue samples were analyzed for changes in type I and II fiber cross sectional area (CSA), non-fiber specific satellite cell count, and SQ adipocyte CSA. On average, all supplement groups including PLA exhibited similar training volumes and experienced statistically similar increases in total body skeletal muscle mass determined by dual x-ray absorptiometry (+2.2 kg; time p=0.024) and type I and II fiber CSA increases (+394 µm2 and +927 µm2; time p<0.001 and 0.024, respectively). Notably, all groups reported increasing Calorie intakes ~600-800 kcal/d from T1 to T39 (time p<0.001), and all groups consumed at least 1.1 g/kg/d of protein at T1 and 1.3 g/kg/d at T39. There was a training, but no supplementation, effect regarding the reduction in SQ adipocyte CSA (-210 µm2; time p=0.001). Interestingly, satellite cell counts within the WPC (p<0.05) and WPH (p<0.05) groups were greater at T39 relative to T1. In summary, LEU or protein supplementation (standardized to LEU content) does not provide added benefit in increasing whole-body skeletal muscle mass or strength above PLA following 3 months of training in previously untrained college-aged males that increase Calorie intakes with resistance training and consume above the recommended daily intake of protein throughout training. However, whey protein supplementation increases skeletal muscle satellite cell number in this population, and this phenomena may promote more favorable training adaptations over more prolonged periods.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 89 |
Est. completion date | August 17, 2017 |
Est. primary completion date | May 17, 2017 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
Gender | Male |
Age group | 19 Years to 35 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: 1. are between the ages of 19-35 and have a body mass index (body mass in kilograms/ height in meters^2) between 23-30 2. are apparently healthy and do not have any known illnesses that are contraindicated for exercise (i.e., hypertension, arrhythmias, or cardiopulmonary diseases), or are not taking medications for these diseases 3. have not engaged in lower-body weight training over the past 12 months; this means less than one training session per every two weeks 4. have not engaged in lower-body endurance training over the past 12 months; this means that the participant has not run more than 10 miles per week or road-biked/swam more than 2 days per week 5. have not consumed nutritional supplements two months prior to the study including hormone boosters, protein supplements, amino acid supplements and/or creatine monohydrate 6. are not regular tobacco users, or haven't been over the past 12 months 7. do not have any blood clotting issues and/or are on blood-thinning agents or medications Exclusion Criteria: 1. are not between the ages of 19-35 or have a body mass index (body mass in kilograms/ height in meters^2) outside the range of 23-30 2. have any known illnesses that are contraindicated for exercise (i.e., hypertension, arrhythmias, or cardiopulmonary diseases), or are not taking medications for these diseases 3. have engaged in lower-body weight training over the past 12 months 4. have engaged in lower-body endurance training over the past 12 months 5. have consumed nutritional supplements two months prior to the study including hormone boosters, protein supplements, amino acid supplements and/or creatine monohydrate 6. are tobacco users 7. have any blood clotting issues and/or are on blood-thinning agents or medications |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Auburn University |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Index of skeletal muscle hypertrophy | Whole-body dual x-ray absorptiometry scan for lean body mass assessment (units in kilograms) | Pre- and post-intervention assessments (12-week seperation between assessments) | |
Secondary | Index of muscle hypertrophy at the cellular level | Muscle fiber cross-sectional area assessment from biopsy specimens via histological methods (units in micrometers-squared) | Pre- and post-intervention assessments (12-week seperation between assessments) | |
Secondary | Index of whole-body adiposity | Whole-body dual x-ray absorptiometry scan for fat mass assessment (units in kilograms) | Pre- and post-intervention assessments (12-week seperation between assessments) | |
Secondary | Index of cellular adiposity | Subcutaneous fat cell cross-sectional area assessment of biopsy specimens via histological methods (units in micrometers-squared) | Pre- and post-intervention assessments (12-week seperation between assessments) |
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