Protein 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the chronic effects of protein?

A
  • 12 weeks resistance exercise training (5 sessions a week) with milk, soy or carbohydrate intake post-exercise
  • Milk enhanced body composition changes with resistance exercise, 3 separate groups
  • Milk group had skimmed 500ml of skimmed milk twice post-exercise - amplified protein synthesis compared to the soy
  • Soy had energy and nutrient matching
  • CHO had same energy matching of the other 2 groups
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2
Q

How was the milk protein group affected in the females data?

A

Female data - protein source increased lean mass(milk)
- Milk group had favourable effect on fat mass(substantial decrease), shown to a lesser extent in the male group. Called body re-composition, usually happens in the early stages of exercise training

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3
Q

How was Whey related to the proportion of fat free mass?

A
  • Whey protein supplementation increase resistance-training induced gains in fat-free mass compared to soy and carbohydrate.
  • Whey was better(high quality) than soy and CHO
  • Soy gives less of a response of protein synthesis, higher consumption could level out the benefit
  • Protein supplementation after 3 months does not provide much benefit
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4
Q

What impact did the use of protein supplementation have?

A
  • Protein supplementation produced small, but significant increases in:
    • 1RM Strength - more beneficial to have greater strength for the same muscle size
    • Fat-free mass
    • Muscle size - very small effect from protein supplementation
  • No effect on fat-free gain mass when protein intake >1.62 g/kg/day
  • Protein intake is usually measured through dietary analysis, disadvantage as it is self-reported(usually means underreporting of calories), or change behaviour to eat less food during the report time
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5
Q

Why is energy intake important for hypertrophy/strength?

A

No change in lean mass results in an energy deficit of about 500kcal per day
15% of their daily intake
- Maintaining energy balance will drive the production of lean mass, being in a surplus is important to gain lean mass

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6
Q

How can exercise increase leucine oxidation?

A
  • BCAA’s oxidised during exercise, rest to exercise increases leucine’s burnt(raises requirement for amin acid intake)
    • Oxidation rate is dependent on CHO availability
  • Generally contribute <5% energy
    • Not a major contributor
    • Can be up to 15% in some situations
  • Required for mitochondrial biogenesis - for endurance athletes
  • Increased requirements for endurance athletes
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7
Q

What is the difference between muscle turnover in resistance vs endurance training?

A

Mitochondrial fraction - responds to both types of exercise
- Resistance trained people after 10 weeks showed amplified muscle turnover(at rest)
- No change in endurance trained group
- After 10 weeks only amplification in mitochondrial fraction in response to resistance training

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8
Q

What are the implications of alcohol on MPS?

A
  • Alcohol ingestion in large amounts reduces muscle protein synthesis
  • Causes stepwise increases across the 3 conditions
  • Maximising MPS response should be avoiding alcohol in large quantities
  • Sufficient protein intake with alcohol intake will reduce the impact of alcohol
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9
Q

What are the effects of protein intake during exercise?

A
  • During ride:
    • 65 g/ h carbohydrate
    • 65 g/ h carbohydrate +19 g/ h protein
  • Performance similar between trials was not different, no benefit of having protein(no drawback of having protein)
  • Could cause more GI discomfort
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10
Q

What is the CHO intake for optimal glycogen synthesis?

Why is this not always achievable?

A

1-1.2 g/kg/h is optimal for glycogen synthesis
- Less than optimal CHO ingestion, with protein intake is beneficial for muscle glycogen resynthesis
- Difficult to do, not possible to only ingest CHO(mainly have a mixed meal 4hrs post-exercise)

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11
Q

What is protein’s role in post-exercise rehydration?

A
  • Exercise-induced dehydration followed by rehydration with two drinks:
    • Carbohydrate-only
    • Carbohydrate-milk protein
  • Addition of milk protein enhances rehydration - increases muscle protein, glycogen resynthesis and rehydration
  • protein ingestion has little effect on the ability to augment postexercise rates of mitochondrial protein synthesis
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12
Q

What are the endurance training adaptations that can be seen from protein and CHO intake?

A
  • Carbohydrate protein intake enhances adaptation to endurance training - endurance benefit
  • Vo2max measured before and after - see an amplified response in the CM condition, protein + CHO condition saw amplified effects
  • Relative increase was slightly bigger than absolute increase = means that the body mass changed/ body recomposition
  • Question of whether milk is a supplement
  • dietary amino acids are preferentially utilized to support greater rates of MPS in the immediate postexercise period with remodelling of whole-body proteins (including the gut) occurring as a secondary process.
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13
Q

What are the protein requirements for these athletes?
- sedentary
- endurance
- strength

How might this differ for an athlete with an energy restriction?

A
  • Sedentary: 0.8 g/ kg
    • Endurance athletes: 1.2-1.6 g/ kg
    • Strength athletes: 1.2-1.7 g/ kg - similar requirements in older adults to reduce loss in muscle mass
  • 3000 kcal/ day (12-15% protein)
    90-113 g/ day (1.3-1.6 g/ kg (for a 70 kg athlete
  • Increased requirement during energy restriction: 2 g/ kg (most athletes are between 1.6-2)
    • Reduces lean tissue loss
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14
Q

How are energy intake and protein correlated?

A

Looks at correlation between energy and protein intake
- Absolute intake of a nutrient is correlated with energy intake
- Each data point is a group of athletes
- Highest calory intake are body builders, due to protein supplements intake
- Nower days most people will be raised slightly because most athletes are on protein supplements
- the co-ingestion of protein and CHO may enhance glucose uptake in the muscle via stimulation of glucose transporters, which ultimately would translate into a greater rate of muscle glycogen resynthesis

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15
Q

What is proteins impact on immune function?

A
  • higher protein intakes are associated with a reduction in the self-reported incidence of upper respiratory tract infections in athletes when undertaking intensified training loads
  • May help mitigate the risk of developing upper respiratory infections in athletes.
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