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What You Eat After Exercise Matters
Many
of the health benefits of aerobic exercise are due to the most recent
exercise session (rather than weeks, months and even years of exercise
training), and the nature of these benefits can be greatly affected by
the food we eat afterwards, according to a study published in the
Journal of Applied Physiology.
"Differences
in what you eat after exercise produce different effects on the body's
metabolism," said the study's senior author, Jeffrey F. Horowitz of the
University of Michigan. This study follows up on several previous
studies that demonstrate that many health benefits of exercise are
transient: one exercise session produces benefits to the body that
taper off, generally within hours or a few days.
"Many
of the improvements in metabolic health associated with exercise stem
largely from the most recent session of exercise, rather than from an
increase in 'fitness' per se," Horowitz said. "But exercise doesn't
occur in a vacuum, and it is very important to look at both the effects
of exercise and what you're eating after exercise."
Specifically,
the study found that exercise enhanced insulin sensitivity,
particularly when meals eaten after the exercise session contained
relatively low carbohydrate content. Enhanced insulin sensitivity means
that it is easier for the body to take up sugar from the blood stream
into tissues like muscles, where it can be stored or used as fuel.
Impaired insulin sensitivity (i.e., "insulin resistance") is a hallmark
of Type II diabetes, as well as being a major risk factor for other
chronic diseases, such as heart disease.
Interestingly,
when the research subjects in this study ate relatively low-calorie
meals after exercise, this did not improve insulin sensitivity any more
than when they ate enough calories to match what they expended during
exercise. This suggests that you don't have to starve yourself after
exercise to still reap some of the important health benefits.
The
paper, "Energy deficit after exercise augments lipid mobilization but
does not contribute to the exercise-induced increase in insulin
sensitivity," appears in the online edition of the journal. The authors
are Sean A. Newsom, Simon Schenk, Kristin M. Thomas, Matthew P. Harber,
Nicolas D. Knuth, Haila Goldenberg and Dr. Horowitz. All are at the
University of Michigan. The American Physiological Society (APS:
www.the-aps.org) published the research.
Study Design
The
study included nine healthy sedentary men, all around 28-30 years old.
They spent four separate sessions in the Michigan Clinical Research
Unit in the University of Michigan Hospital. Each session lasted for
approximately 29 hours. They fasted overnight before attending each
session, which began in the morning.
The
four hospital visits differed primarily by the meals eaten after
exercise. The following describes the four different visits:
- They did not exercise and ate meals to match their daily calorie expenditure. This was the control trial.
- They
exercised for approximately 90 min at moderate intensity, and then ate
meals that matched their caloric expenditure. The carbohydrate, fat,
and protein content of these meals were also appropriately balanced to
match their expenditure.
- They
exercised for approximately 90 min at moderate intensity and then ate
meals with relatively low carbohydrate content, but they ate enough
total calories to match their calorie expenditure. This
reduced-carbohydrate meal contained about 200 grams of carbohydrate,
less than half the carbohydrate content of the balanced meal.
- They
exercised for approximately 90 min at moderate intensity and then ate
relatively low-calorie meals, that is, meals that provided less energy
than was expended (about one-third fewer calories than the meals in the
other two exercise trials). These meals contained a relatively high
carbohydrate content to replace the carbohydrate "burned" during
exercise.
- The
exercise was performed on a stationary bicycle and a treadmill. The
order in which the participants did the trials was randomized.
In the
three exercise trials, there was a trend for an increase in insulin
sensitivity. However, when participants ate less carbohydrate after
exercise, this enhanced insulin sensitivity significantly more.
Although weight loss is important for improving metabolic health in
overweight and obese people, these results suggests that people can
still reap some important health benefits from exercise without
undereating or losing weight, Dr. Horowitz said.
The
study also reinforces the growing body of evidence that each exercise
session can affect the body's physiology and also that differences in
what you eat after exercise can produce different physiological
changes.
Next Steps
The
research team is now performing experiments with obese people, aimed at
better identifying the minimum amount of exercise that will still
improve insulin sensitivity at least into the next day.
For more information on the American Physiological Society, visit www.the-aps.org
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