Tag Archives: physical activity

What is the Optimal Amount of Protein to Support Post-Exercise Skeletal Muscle Reconditioning in the Older Adult?

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This is not going to be a long in-depth blog. In fact, it will simply provide a very condensed review of the paper recently published by Churchward-Venne et al (2016) in the Sports Medicine journal where they discuss: “the current state of evidence regarding the dose-dependent relationship between dietary protein ingestion and changes in skeletal muscle protein synthesis during recovery from resistance-type exercise in older adults. They provide recommendations on the amount of protein that may be required to maximize skeletal muscle reconditioning in response to resistance-type exercise in older adults.”

With an approximately $US50 cost to access this article, most will  simply not be willing to fork out that sort of money. So I wanted to outline the key points that were made in this article and provide a little bit more than what appears in the below online abstract. If you have any questions or want further information just leave a comment at the end of the article and I’ll get back to you as soon as possible.

Whey protein and muscle recovery
Whey Protein Increases Myofibrillar Protein Synthesis Rates

ABSTRACT: Hyperaminoacidemia following protein ingestion enhances the anabolic effect of resistance-type exercise by increasing the stimulation of muscle protein synthesis and attenuating the exercise-mediated increase in muscle protein breakdown rates. Although factors such as the source of protein ingested and the timing of intake relative to exercise can impact post-exercise muscle protein synthesis rates, the amount of protein ingested after exercise appears to be the key nutritional factor dictating the magnitude of the muscle protein synthetic response during post-exercise recovery. In younger adults, muscle protein synthesis rates after resistance-type exercise respond in a dose-dependent manner to ingested protein and are maximally stimulated following ingestion of ~20 g of protein. In contrast to younger adults, older adults are less sensitive to smaller doses of ingested protein (less than ~20 g) after exercise, as evidenced by an attenuated increase in muscle protein synthesis rates during post-exercise recovery. However, older muscle appears to retain the capacity to display a robust stimulation of muscle protein synthesis in response to the ingestion of greater doses of protein (~40 g), and such an amount may be required for older adults to achieve a robust stimulation of muscle protein synthesis during post-exercise recovery. The aim of this article is to discuss the current state of evidence regarding the dose-dependent relationship between dietary protein ingestion and changes in skeletal muscle protein synthesis during recovery from resistance-type exercise in older adults. We provide recommendations on the amount of protein that may be required to maximize skeletal muscle reconditioning in response to resistance-type exercise in older adults.

Key points

  • The key question often posed in relation to diet and resistance training is: “How much protein should I consume after a workout/training session to maximise the adaptive response to resistance-type exercise?”
  • Whilst the answer to this question is not entirely clear what is known is that this depends on 4 key things: age, bodyweight, energy balance and possibly training status.
  • Evidence shows that maximising skeletal muscle protein synthesis rates during recovery from resistance training exercise in younger adults is sufficiently accommodated by the ingestion of ∼20 g of protein or ∼0.25 g protein/kilogram bodyweight.
  • Older adults demonstrate a blunted post-prandial muscle protein synthetic response.
  • However, older adults as opposed to younger adults require higher amounts of protein during recovery from resistance training exercise to optimally stimulate muscle protein syntheis. Intakes even up to ∼40 g appear necessary.
  • No consensus currently exists regarding the amount of protein required to maximally stimulate skeletal muscle protein synethsis rates during recovery from resistance training exercise in older adults.
Resistance training room
The Future Treatment For Sarcopenia-induced Muscle Atrophy?
  • Given that older adults not involved in resistance training or vigourous physical activity require an increased intake of protein relative to younger adults, a higher protein intake seems warranted post-exercise after performing resistance training.
  • Leucine-enriched whey protein or increased EAA providing 3.5 g leucine have prolonged the duration of the increase in myofibrillar protein synthesis rates following resistive exercise in older men.
  • Technically, the capacity of older skeletal muscle to robustly respond with increased protein synthetic response post-resistive exercise may relate to leucine-mediated increases in p70S6K1 (Thr389) phosphorylation and/or amino acid transporter expression.
  • The availability of dietary protein-derived amino acids within the circulation following protein ingestion is reduced in older adults.
  • The ‘optimal’ dose of ingested protein as previously mentioned may therefore be double (∼40 g) that required by younger adults.
  • The dose of ingested protein to induce a maximal stimulation of muscle protein synethesis following resistive exercise appears to increase during energy deficit versus energy balance.
  • Greater rates of muscle protein synethesis have been demonstrated when 30 g versus 15 g of whey protein were consumed after training in younger adults when under conditions of mild energy deficit.
  • Older adults in energy deficit and engaged in resistive exercise may require even higher amounts of post-exercise protein >40 g but <50 g; however, this is based entirely from extrapolating from younger adults and is therefore speculative at this point in time
  • There is a lack of data as to the amount of ingested protein required to maximally stimulate skeletal muscle protein synthesis after resistance-type exercise in younger and older women.
  • Continued research is required to unravel the contribution of ageing versus age-related decreases in physical activity on anabolic resistance and whether or not resistive exercise and/or increases in physical activity can reduce age-related anabolic resistance to protein feeding.
  • Work on masters athletes with above-average fitness and muscular strength will hopefully help researchers decipher the exact nature of anabolic age-related resistance.
  • It is envisaged that this will provide valuable guidance on how best to attenuate these changes through resistive exercise and/or physical activity in addition to nutritional strategies aimed at facilitating maximal muscle protein synthesis.

Reference

Churchward-Venne TA. et al. (2016) “What is the Optimal Amount of Protein to Support Post-Exercise Skeletal Muscle Reconditioning in the Older Adult?” Sports Medicine (see here for publication)


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Dose-Response Relationships Of Resistance Training In Healthy Old Adults: The Inter-Set Rest Period

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There has been a significant amount of research conducted and published recently that seeks to better understand the precise resistance training parameters required to maximise muscle strength and morphology in healthy old adults. This has been driven largely by the growing acknowledgment and concern related to the process of sacropenia that occurs with ageing whereby muscle mass, strength and functional capacity decline. Both the practical and clinical implications of this are far reaching for each individual affected, but have far wider social, economic and political ramifications regarding future health care policy in relation to the ageing population. Of the many interventions explored, resistance training has been shown to rapidly improve various aspects of muscle morphology and function. In fact, results of studies looking at this form of exercise suggest that most, if not all adults over the course of their lifespan, should indulge in regular, challenging resistance training.

Sarcopenia, resistance training, strength, older adult
Resistance training facilitates rapid improvements in muscle strength and function

The rest between each set of repetitions performed during a resistance training session – known as the inter-set rest period – is something that has been recently explored. Attempts to discover the optimal inter-set rest period of time to maximise the effectiveness of a training program continues, but so far consensus has been difficult to establish. Results from studies (see below) conducted in healthy old untrained men compared to young resistance-trained men produced completely opposite conclusions with shorter 1-minute rests augmenting strength and hypertrophy better in the former group but longer 3-minute rests working better for the latter group. The question arises, how is this possible? At face value, these results suggest that resistive exercise adaptations may be training-status and/or age-specific.

I recently emailed the authors of these papers to canvass some of the possible methodological confounders that may have influenced the results by skewing them in favour of one group over another. Given that such research often informs future recommendations regarding best practice when designing resistance training programs, any possible confounders affecting the results need to be highlighted. Robust discussion is required in an effort to further strengthen and validate the conclusions of these studies so that bodies like National Strength and Conditioning Association (NSCA) can make accurate and evidence-based recommendations.

The following analysis is a summary of the email I sent to the authors for comment. Unfortunately, I did not receive any feedback which was pretty disappointing. The 2 key papers are (with full citation at the end):

“Dose-response relationships of resistance training in healthy old adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis”

“Short rest interval lengths between sets optimally enhance body composition and performance with 8 weeks of strength resistance training in older men”

COMMENT: Whilst I am open to the possibility that shorter interset rest periods could potentially lead to greater muscular strength and hypertrophic adaptations in untrained healthy older men, I am also trying to reconcile results of another recently published paper by Schoenfeld and colleagues titled “Longer inter-set rest periods enhance muscle strength and hypertrophy in resistance-trained men” that found the direct opposite. Perhaps this is not so surprising if most of the decline in skeletal muscle mass with ageing, as shown by Nilwik et al (2013) a few years ago, results almost exclusively from atrophy of type II muscle fibres. Taken together these divergent results would suggest that resistive exercise adaptations may be training-status and/or age specific.

Shorter inter-set rest periods for resistance training in older adults
Are shorter inter-set rest periods better?

I have not come across any discussion or research so far that has attempted to correlate the relationship of the effectiveness of shorter or longer interset rest periods with the observed selective atrophy of type II muscle fibres which has been shown to occur in untrained older men. It would be interesting to see if the disproportionate representation of slow twitch muscle fibres in untrained older men somehow decreases the effectiveness of longer interset rest periods.

My proposition, however, is this. The key finding – that a shorter interset rest period was found to be superior – could have been confounded by:

  • The testing protocol utilised and;
  • A small group of participants reducing the power to detect whether significant differences exist in true baseline training status and “responsiveness” to training during week 0 to week 4 of the matched groups.

I should point out that the statistical analysis as it stands doesn’t support my comments so please bear this in mind.

The variables and areas that I would like to focus on and discuss are:

  1. The testing protocol utilised to assess 1-RM performance.
  2. Age differences found and whether age was adjusted for all phases.
  3. Baseline Margaria stair-climbing power.
  4. The rate and percentage improvement differences found for Bilateral Leg Press 1RM (kg) week 0 to week 4 when all subjects were doing the same program during Mesocycle I.
  5. The rate and percentage improvement differences from week 0 to week 4 for the walking test when all subjects were doing the same program during Mesocycle I.
  6. Some statistical and data anomalies that I couldn’t make sense of.

For the remainder of the article I will use SS to refer to short inter-set rest periods and SL will refer to longer inter-set rest periods.

After reading through the testing protocol used to assess 1-RM performance it seems to me that this unfairly advantages the SS group. The strength training phase for the SS group from week 4 to 12 used 1-minute interset rest periods whilst the SL group used 4 minutes. With the testing protocol using 1-2 minute rests between 1-RM attempts the SS group would have been far better adapted both physically and mentally to perform maximally for this testing protocol because their training closely resembled testing procedures. Maybe some of the testing should have included 4-minute rests between 1-RM attempts to control for this. As it stands, the methodological approach taken for this study could have produced significantly greater 1-RM strength testing outcomes in the SS group.

Ironically, the study by Schoenfeld and co. (younger trained men) found that longer rests (3-minutes) were superior to shorter (1-minute) for strength and hypertrophy gains. But once again the results may have been skewed because the testing protocol more closely matched the longer rest period group where they used 3-5 minute rest periods during testing.

During Mesocycle II an 8 week strength training phase was completed where only the interset rest period differed. This phase was adjusted for values at week -4 and 0, as well as age. During Mesocycle I, a 4 week high-volume, moderate-intensity hypertrophic training phase was followed by all participants. After adjusting for values at week -4 results showed all subjects significantly improved in training and testing parameters. However, I’m wondering if age was adjusted for during Mesocycle I as there is no reference that this was done in the results described for this phase on p.301.

At baseline most variables in Table 1 page 297 show that there were no significant differences between the SS and SL groups. The variable that caught my eye that I found interesting was Margaria stair-climbing power (W) with a trend toward a significant difference (p=0.07) in favour of SS. Whilst not reaching p<0.05 level, the 26.6% greater power achieved for the week 0 Margaria test in the SS vs. SL group is fairly large by any measure. This test would be the best indicator of lower body power and would also be the most challenging in terms of motor pattern complexity thus making it perhaps the most sensitive in determining baseline group differences in training status compared to the other variables measured. By extension, if we assume that there was perhaps some sort of training status difference at baseline between SS vs SL, the overall improvements from training would be skewed in favour of the SS group.

Muscle hypertrophy in older adults
What’s the best way to increase muscle mass with ageing?

During Mesocycle I all subjects performed the same training program. Results showed that following this phase of training, the 2 treatment groups were comparable for most variables apart from the narrow/neutral lat pulldown and some of the SEBT tests. The significant difference found for the pulldown is surprising with an increase in the SS group from 336.2 kg to 380.2 kg (+13.1% increase over baseline) vs SL from 299.4 kg to 339.9 kg (+13.5% increase over baseline).

In relation to the Bilateral leg press 1-RM (kg) baseline values for SS vs SL were 224.0 kg and 215.3 kg, respectively, increasing to 327.9 kg and 278.7 kg at week 4. The average absolute increase in kilograms lifted for 1-RM were thus 103.9 kg for SS and 63.4 kg for SL. So a baseline difference of 8.7 kg increased to 40.5 kg by week 4. Figure 1b for the Leg Press is quite telling too for the week 0 to week 4 period. The improvement of the SS group compared to the SL group during Mesocycle I is visually very noticeable with the gradient of improvement of the SS group much steeper than the SL group.

In relation to the 400-meter walking test baseline values for SS vs SL were 182.8 and 187.2 seconds, respectively, decreasing to 164.6 and 176.3 seconds after 4 weeks training. Absolute decreases in time taken to perform the walking test were therefore 18.2 seconds for SS and 10.9 seconds for SL. This comparison I think is illustrated even better if both groups are compared for the distance differential after completion of this test. At baseline, the SS group would have finished 9.4 metres in front of the SL group. After 4 weeks of Mesocycle I training the SS group would have finished 26.5 metres in front of the SL group.

These testing results seen over Mesocycle I are pretty decent and if observed in a field situation would constitute a difference in training responsiveness.

For the Margaria stair-climbing power test the week 12 data as presented in Figure 3b has to be either a mistake or a misprint. In table 2 the SD for this test at week 12 was 1117.3 W compared to what appears to be almost 2300 W in figure 3.

SUMMARY: The single biggest issue with the finding that shorter 1-minute rests augment strength better in older untrained men, is that the testing protocol utilised a short rest period between maximal efforts thereby favouring the group that trained in this fashion.

Possible baseline differences in lower body power and differences in training “responsiveness” during the first Mesocycle phase are other potential issues that I would have liked investigated or explored further.

References

Borde, R., Hortobágyi, T. and Granacher, U. (2015) “Dose-response relationships of resistance training in healthy old adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis” Sports Med. 45: 1693-1720

Nilwik, R. et al. (2013) “The decline in skeletal muscle mass with aging is mainly attributed to a reduction of type II muscle fiber size” Experimental Gerontology. 48: 492-498.

Schoenfeld, B.J. et al. (2015) “Longer inter-set rest periods enhance muscle strength and hypertrophy in resistance-trained men” The Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. November http://www.researchgate.net/publication/284711582

Villanueva, M.G., Lane, C.J. and Schroeder, E.T. (2015) “Short rest interval lengths between sets optimally enhance body composition and performance with 8 weeks of strength resistance training in older men” Eur J Appl Physiol. 115: 295-308.

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