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Protein drinks after exercise help maintain
aging muscles
New research in the FASEB Journal suggests
that protein drinks help older subjects
build more formidable muscles than their
counterparts who drink carbohydrate
beverages
June 5, 2011—A new research report
appearing online in theFASEB Journal (http://www.fasebj.org)
shows that what someone drinks after
exercise plays a critical role in maximizing
the effects of exercise.
Specifically, the report shows that protein
drinks after aerobic activity increases the
training effect after six weeks, when
compared to carbohydrate drinks.
Additionally, this study suggests that this
effect can be seen using as little as 20
grams of protein.
"It is not a mystery that exercise and
nutrition help slow the aging process," said
Benjamin F. Miller, Ph.D., a researcher
involved in the work from the Department of
Health and Exercise Science at Colorado
State University in Fort Collins, Colorado.
"Studies such as ours help to explain how
exercise and nutrition work so that we can
better take advantage of those pathways to
slow the aging process."
To make this discovery, scientists recruited
16 participants age 37 and older and
instructed them to exercise on treadmills
for 45 minutes three times a week for six
weeks.
After each bout of exercise, one group was
given a protein drink and another group was
given a carbohydrate drink. To measure the
making of new structures in the muscle,
metabolic pathways were measured using heavy
water labeling. Subjects consumed heavy
water, which becomes incorporated into many
synthetic processes allowing measurement of
the rates at which different components of
the muscle are being made. Using
ultra-sensitive mass spectrometry methods,
scientists took muscle samples at the end of
the six weeks and were able to determine how
much of the muscle and its component pieces
were new.
In this case, new proteins, DNA, and
membranes were measured. This showed that
endurance exercise, commonly prescribed for
older people for a healthful lifestyle,
induces positive changes in skeletal muscle
structure.
"If you want to age gracefully, this study
shows that proteins taken after exercise
keep your muscles strong and fit," Gerald
Weissmann, M.D., Editor-in-Chief of the FASEB
Journal. "You've got to feed your body
with the proper nutrients after a work-out.
Fortunately, protein shakes are cheap,
readily available and some say taste good."
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