Abstract
This study examined the interaction of 2 diets (high protein, reduced carbohydrates vs. low protein, high carbohydrates) with
exercise on body composition and blood lipids in women (n = 48, ∼46 y old, BMI = 33 kg/m2)
during weight loss. The study was a 4-mo weight loss trial using a 2 × 2
block design (Diet × Exercise). Diets were equal
in total energy (7.1 MJ/d) and lipids (∼30% energy
intake) but differed in protein content and the ratio of
carbohydrate:protein
at 1.6 g/(kg · d) and <1.5 (PRO group) vs. 0.8
g/(kg · d) and >3.5 (CHO group), respectively. Exercise comparisons
were lifestyle
activity (control) vs. a supervised exercise
program (EX: 5 d/wk walking and 2 d/wk resistance training). Subjects in
the
PRO and PRO + EX groups lost more total weight and
fat mass and tended to lose less lean mass (P = 0.10) than the
CHO and CHO + EX groups. Exercise increased loss of body fat and
preserved lean mass. The combined effects
of diet and exercise were additive for improving
body composition. Serum lipid profiles improved in all groups, but
changes
varied among diet treatments. Subjects in the CHO
groups had larger reductions in total cholesterol and LDL cholesterol,
whereas
subjects in the PRO groups had greater reductions
in triacylglycerol and maintained higher concentrations of HDL
cholesterol.
This study demonstrated that a diet with higher
protein and reduced carbohydrates combined with exercise additively
improved
body composition during weight loss, whereas the
effects on blood lipids differed between diet treatments.
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