Milk as a Recovery Beverage After Exercise for Improving Metabolic Health
NCT ID: NCT03154216
Last Updated: 2019-05-07
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
20 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2017-05-20
2019-01-01
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Carbohydrate quality may influence postprandial lipid response. Carbohydrates can be classified by their glycemic index (GI), where high GI carbohydrates are rapidly digested and result in large elevations in blood glucose. Low GI carbohydrates are digested slowly and result in a smaller, more gradual rise in blood glucose. High GI carbohydrates are associated with an elevated risk of cardiovascular disease and increased weight gain; whereas low GI carbohydrates are associated with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease and decreased weight gain. As mentioned above, one of the main benefits of an acute session of exercise is to reduce TG levels after a subsequent meal. For example, an evening exercise session reduces the blood TG response after a high-fat breakfast provided the next day. This effect is negated if high GI beverages (i.e. sugar-sweetened drinks) are consumed immediately after exercise. Sports drinks such as Gatorade, and skim milk or chocolate milk are the leading beverages promoted for consumption during recovery after exercise. Gatorade has a high GI (i.e. GI=89) due to the inclusion of high amounts of simple sugars, whereas milk has a low GI (i.e. GI=34). Milk may therefore be a healthier choice for consumption after exercise.
No study has determined the effects of consuming low GI milk after an exercise session on next-day postprandial TG. Considering that consuming beverages after exercise is common practice and can influence blood lipid profiles, investigation into effects of low GI milk versus high GI recovery beverages is required.
The aim of this proposal is to determine if replacing calories expended during an evening session of endurance exercise with low GI milk can improve postprandial TG after a meal the next morning. We propose to look at the effects of consuming skim milk compared to Gatorade after endurance exercise on the blood TG, other lipids, glucose levels, and blood pressure responses after a high-fat meal consumed the morning after the exercise.
Our objective is to determine the effect of consuming milk after an evening exercise session on blood triglyceride response to a high fat meal the next morning. This will be compared to: A condition where exercise is performed followed by consumption of a high glycemic index Gatorade beverage; a condition where only exercise is performed with no after-exercise caloric consumption; a condition where neither exercise nor beverage is consumed in the evening. After each of these conditions, a high fat breakfast will be consumed the following morning (about 10 hours after the end of the exercise session). Blood will be collected before the breakfast and for 6 hours after the breakfast to determine postprandial metabolic response.
Our secondary objectives are to determine the effect of each condition on postprandial insulin, high density lipoprotein, apolipoprotein B, total cholesterol, and free fatty acids, and muscle fat oxidation. Blood pressure will also be assessed immediately after the evening exercise session and beverage consumption and continue throughout the night and throughout the postprandial period the next day.
Our primary hypothesis is that consuming low glycemic index milk after the evening exercise session will be superior to consuming Gatorade for reducing postprandial triglycerides the next morning.
Our secondary hypotheses are that consuming low glycemic index milk after the evening exercise session will be superior to consuming Gatorade for improving other metabolic measures (i.e. increasing high density lipoproteins, plasma free fatty acids, and fat oxidation, and reducing apolipoprotein B, low density lipoproteins, total cholesterol, and blood pressure) during the postprandial period after a high-fat meal.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
CROSSOVER
BASIC_SCIENCE
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Exercise only
90 minutes of exercise
Exercise
90 minutes of moderate-intensity walking exercise on a treadmill
Exercise and high glycemic index drink
90 minutes of exercise followed by consumption of high-glycemic index Gatorade drink matched for calories expended during the exercise
Exercise
90 minutes of moderate-intensity walking exercise on a treadmill
Drink
Beverage to be consumed after exercise
Exercise and low glycemic index drink
90 minutes of exercise followed by consumption of low-glycemic index milk drink matched for calories expended during the exercise
Exercise
90 minutes of moderate-intensity walking exercise on a treadmill
Drink
Beverage to be consumed after exercise
No exercise and no beverage
No exercise and no beverage
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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Exercise
90 minutes of moderate-intensity walking exercise on a treadmill
Drink
Beverage to be consumed after exercise
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* 18-44 years of age
Exclusion Criteria
* smokers
* those taking medications for cholesterol or glucose
* those who are allergic to milk
18 Years
44 Years
ALL
Yes
Sponsors
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Dairy Farmers of Canada
OTHER
University of Saskatchewan
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Phil Chilibeck
Professor
Principal Investigators
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Philip Chilibeck, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
University of Saskatchewan
Locations
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College of Kinesiology, University of Saskatchewan
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan (SK), Canada
Countries
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References
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Kaviani M, Chilibeck PD, Yee P, Zello GA. The effect of consuming low- versus high-glycemic index meals after exercise on postprandial blood lipid response following a next-day high-fat meal. Nutr Diabetes. 2016 Jul 4;6(7):e216. doi: 10.1038/nutd.2016.26.
Gao R, Rapin N, Elnajmi AM, Gordon J, Zello GA, Chilibeck PD. Skim milk as a recovery beverage after exercise is superior to a sports drink for reducing next-day postprandial blood glucose and increasing postprandial fat oxidation. Nutr Res. 2020 Oct;82:58-66. doi: 10.1016/j.nutres.2020.08.007. Epub 2020 Aug 19.
Other Identifiers
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16-300
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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