PubMed ↗️

Researchers: Fanny Buckinx, Vincent Marcangeli, Lívia Pinheiro Carvalho, Maude Dulac, Guy Hajj Boutros, Gilles Gouspillou, Pierrette Gaudreau, José Morais, Philippe Noirez, Mylène Aubertin-Leheudre

BACKGROUND: This study evaluates whether the initial amount of dietary protein intake could influence the combined effect of high-intensity interval training (HIIT) and citrulline (CIT), or HIIT alone, on body composition, muscle strength, and functional capacities in obese older adults. METHODS: Seventy-three sedentary obese older men and women who completed a 12-week elliptical HIIT program with double-blinded randomized supplementation of CIT or placebo (PLA) were divided into four groups according to their initial protein intake (CIT-PROT+: n = 21; CIT-PROT-: n = 19; PLA-PROT+: n = 19; PLA-PROT-: n = 14). Body composition (fat and fat-free masses), handgrip (HSr) strength, knee extensor (KESr) strength, muscle power, and functional capacities were measured pre-intervention and post-intervention. RESULTS: Following the intervention, the four groups improved significantly regarding all the parameters measured. For the same initial amount of protein intake, the CIT-PROT- group decreased more gynoid fat mass (p = 0.04) than the PLA-PROT- group. The CIT-PROT+ group increased more KESr (p = 0.04) than the PLA-PROT+ group. In addition, the CIT-PROT- group decreased more gynoid FM (p = 0.02) and improved more leg FFM (p = 0.02) and HSr (p = 0.02) than the CIT-PROT+ group. CONCLUSION: HIIT combined with CIT induced greater positive changes than in the PLA groups. The combination seems more beneficial in participants consuming less than 1 g/kg/d of protein, since greater improvements on body composition and muscle strength were observed.

References

Topic: Body Composition Changes with Exercise in Aging