Effect of calorie restriction with or without exercise on body ... - CiteSeerX

18 downloads 851 Views 371KB Size Report
Jan 2, 2007 - Email: [email protected]. Key Words: caloric ... FFM, fat-free mass; VAT, visceral adipose tissue; SAT, subcutaneous adipose tissue; DSAT, .... commercially available software (Analyze, Analyze Direct, Lenexa, KS). Areas of ...
J Clin Endocrin Metab. First published ahead of print January 2, 2007 as doi:10.1210/jc.2006-2184

1

Effect of calorie restriction with or without exercise on body composition and fat distribution Short title: Calorie restriction vs. exercise on body composition Authors: Leanne M Redman, Leonie K Heilbronn, Corby K Martin, Anthony Alfonso, Steven R Smith, Eric Ravussin for the Pennington CALERIE team. Affiliation: Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Baton Rouge, LA, 70808 Corresponding Author Eric Ravussin 6400 Perkins Rd, Baton Rouge, LA 70808 Ph: 225 763 3186, Fax: 225 763 3030, Email: [email protected]

Key Words: caloric restriction, exercise, fat distribution Abbreviations: CR, caloric restriction; CR+EX, caloric restriction plus exercise; FM: fat mass; FFM, fat-free mass; VAT, visceral adipose tissue; SAT, subcutaneous adipose tissue; DSAT, deep subcutaneous adipose tissue; SSAT, superficial subcutaneous adipose tissue. Disclosure summary: The authors have nothing to disclose Support: This work was supported by U01 AG20478 (ER). LMR is supported by a Neil Hamilton-Fairley Training Fellowship awarded by the NHMRC of Australia (ID 349553). Clinical trial registration number: CALERIE, NCT00099151 (clinicaltrials.gov) Number of words (3946), number of words (217), number of tables (2) and figures (2)

Copyright (C) 2007 by The Endocrine Society

2 Abstract 2 Context. There is debate over the independent and combined effects of dieting and increased 4

physical activity on improving metabolic risk factors (body composition and fat distribution). Objective. Conduct a randomized controlled trial (CALERIE) to test the effect of a 25% energy

6

deficit by diet alone or diet plus exercise for 6 months on body composition and fat distribution. Design. Randomized controlled trial. Setting: Institutional Research Center. Participants.

8

Thirty-five out of 36 overweight but otherwise healthy participants (16M/19F) completed the study. Intervention. Participants were randomized to either control (healthy weight-maintenance

10

diet, n=11), calorie restriction (CR: 25% reduction in energy intake, n=12) or caloric restriction+exercise (CR+EX: 12.5% reduction in energy intake+12.5% increase in exercise

12

energy expenditure, n=12) for 6 months. Main outcome measures. Changes in body composition by DXA and changes in abdominal fat distribution by multislice CT. Results. The

14

calculated energy deficit across the intervention was not different between CR and CR+EX. Participants lost ~10% of body weight (CR:-8.3±0.8, CR+EX:-8.1±0.8kg, p=1.00), ~24% of fat

16

mass (CR:-5.8±0.6, CR+EX:-6.4±0.6kg, p=0.99), and 27% of abdominal visceral fat (CR:0.9±0.2, CR+EX:0.8±0.2kg, p=1.00). Both whole body and abdominal fat distribution were

18

not altered by the intervention. Conclusion. Exercise plays an equivalent role to CR in terms of energy balance; however it can also improve aerobic fitness which has other important

20

cardiovascular and metabolic implications.

3 A growing body of literature demonstrates that in comparison with a dietary restriction 2

intervention alone, exercise, accompanied with or without weight loss can lead to favorable changes in body composition including a reduction in abdominal adiposity (1-4). It is therefore

4

reasonable to hypothesize, when exercise is included in a weight loss therapy, greater improvements in body composition and metabolic outcomes may be evident. Few randomized

6

controlled trials, however, have specifically tested this hypothesis and compared the metabolic responses of a dietary restriction intervention to a dietary restriction plus exercise intervention.

8

Collectively these reports indicate that exercise, when combined with dietary restriction, leads to similar reductions in weight (4-8) but more substantial improvements in glucose tolerance (9,

10

10), lipoprotein profiles (6-8, 11, 12) and the risks associated with coronary heart disease (8, 11). There is debate however, regarding the change in fat mass. One study using hydrostatic

12

weighing (8) reported an additional 80% reduction in fat mass when exercise was added to dietary restriction while others have reported no difference (5, 6, 10). Furthermore only one

14

study used dual x-ray absorptiometry (7) and to our knowledge none have assessed total or abdominal fat distribution by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging. Therefore

16

the important role of these interventions on fat depots and their relationship to metabolic outcomes cannot be explained in these studies.

18 A combined exercise and dietary restriction intervention could further enhance the metabolic 20

effects of a diet-only intervention through exercise-mediated lipolysis in adipose tissue and mitochondrial biogenesis and improved glucose uptake in skeletal muscle. In most of the

22

randomized controlled trials mentioned above (5-12), the degree of dietary restriction applied to the treatment arms (diet only or diet + exercise) was carefully matched, with the exercise

4 24

component added on top. However, the exercise while supervised (in most cases) was not designed to achieve a pre-determined energy expenditure nor was it quantified throughout the

26

intervention in terms of energy cost. Therefore, the total energy deficit applied to the diet + exercise groups was larger than that of the diet-only group explaining, at least in part, the

28

observed enhanced metabolic responses in the exercise groups. There is a need, therefore to clarify whether dietary restriction when combined with exercise leads to greater improvements in

30

body composition and fat distribution, than calorie restriction alone when the total energy deficit is carefully matched between groups. Therefore, a key secondary aim of CALERIE, a

32

randomized controlled trial designed to study the effects of calorie restriction on metabolic adaptation in overweight men and women (13) was to investigate and compare the changes in

34

body composition and fat distribution. In this study, a 25% energy restriction was prescribed by diet only or diet combined with exercise for 6 months and both energy intake and energy

36

expenditure were rigorously controlled and monitored. We hypothesized that changes in body composition and abdominal fat would be enhanced during a caloric restriction intervention that

38

combined dieting and exercise.

40

Subjects and Methods Subjects and screening. Healthy, overweight (25 ≤ BMI < 30) men (25 –

Suggest Documents