Loading...
The effect of whey protein supplementation on myofibrillar protein synthesis and performance recovery in resistance-trained men
Date
2020
Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of whey protein supplementation on myofibrillar protein synthesis (myoPS) and muscle recovery over a 7-d period of intensified resistance training (RT). Methods: In a double-blind randomised parallel group design, 16 resistance-trained men aged 18 to 35 years completed a 7-d RT protocol, consisting of three lower-body RT sessions on non-consecutive days. Participants consumed a controlled diet (146 kJ·kg−1 ·d −1 , 1.7 g·kg−1 ·d −1 protein) with either a whey protein supplement or an isonitrogenous control (0.33 g·kg−1 ·d −1 protein). To measure myoPS, 400 ml of deuterium oxide (D2O) (70 atom %) was ingested the day prior to starting the study and m. vastus lateralis biopsies were taken before and after RT-intervention. Myofibrillar fractional synthetic rate (myoFSR) was calculated via deuterium labelling of myofibrillar-bound alanine, measured by gas chromatography-pyrolysis-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (GC-Pyr-IRMS). Muscle recovery parameters (i.e., countermovement jump height, isometric-squat force, muscle soreness and serum creatine kinase) were assessed daily. Results: MyoFSR PRE was 1.6 (0.2) %·d −1 (mean (SD)). Whey protein supplementation had no effect on myoFSR (p = 0.771) or any recovery parameter (p = 0.390–0.989). Conclusions: Over an intense 7-d RT protocol, 0.33 g·kg−1 ·d −1 of supplemental whey protein does not enhance day-to-day measures of myoPS or postexercise recovery in resistance-trained men
Supervisor
Description
peer-reviewed
Publisher
MDPI
Citation
Nutrients;12, 845
Files
Loading...
Davies_2020_Effect.pdf
Adobe PDF, 774.92 KB
Funding code
Funding Information
Enterprise Ireland (EI)
Sustainable Development Goals
External Link
Type
Article
Rights
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/1.0/
