Spontaneous activity responses to exercise in males and females
McLaughlin, R.R. and Malkova, D. and Nimmo, M.A. (2006) Spontaneous activity responses to exercise in males and females. European Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2006 (60). pp. 1055-1061. ISSN 1476-5640 (https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejcn.1602417)
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This study examines the impact of a short-term exercise programme, prescribed on the basis of current exercise recommendations, on energy balance in males and females to assess whether this type of exercise induces compensatory changes in spontaneous activity energy expenditure (SAEE) and energy intake (EI). Individuals were monitored for 16 days, 8 days of habitual physical activity (C) and 8 days when exercise was imposed (E). Total energy expenditure (TEE) was calculated from individual relationships of O2 and CO2 to heart rate (HR) records of HR and physical activity obtained during waking hours of the C and E periods and basal metabolic rate (BMR) measurements (Deltatrac System, Datex Instrumentation). Changes in nude body mass (BM) were estimated by using a digital scale (Sartorius AG, Gottigen, Germany). Laboratory and free-living. Eight lean females (body fat: 17.54.5%) and eight males of similar percentage body fat participated in this study. All subjects were Caucasian and aged between 20 and 25 years. During the E period, a supervised exercise session was conducted every second day, each consisting of a total net energy expenditure of 2092 kJ+BMR at 90% lactate threshold. During the E period, TEE was higher than C in males and females (exercise: 95.213.9, 78.315.9 MJ; control: 82.410.4, 68.816.7 MJ, respectively; P<0.00; P=0.02). SAEE, calculated as TEE minus the energy expended during exercise, was not significantly different between C (males: 82.44.8 MJ; females: 68.87.6 MJ) and E (males: 86.86.3 MJ; females: 70.07.2 MJ) periods in either gender. Males showed no change in BM over the C (pre-intervention: 83.47.2 kg; post-intervention: 83.16.8 kg) or E (pre-intervention: 83.46.8 kg; post-intervention: 83.46.8 kg) periods. Females' BM over the C period did not alter (pre-intervention: 63.32.8 kg; post-intervention 63.73.1 kg); however, there was a significant decrease (P<0.00) in BM over the E period (pre-intervention: 63.02.7 kg; post-intervention: 62.42.7 kg). The exercise programme was achieved in males and females without any impact on SAEE. Therefore, differences between genders in relation to BM reduction can be explained by differences in the EI response to exercise.
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Item type: Article ID code: 37271 Dates: DateEvent2006Published11 February 2006Published OnlineSubjects: Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > Recreation Leisure Department: Faculty of Education > Sport, Culture and The Arts
Faculty of Science > Strathclyde Institute of Pharmacy and Biomedical SciencesDepositing user: Pure Administrator Date deposited: 01 Feb 2012 12:00 Last modified: 11 Nov 2024 08:59 URI: https://strathprints.strath.ac.uk/id/eprint/37271