Biological and behavioral predictors of relative energy intake after acute exercise

Energy intake in the post-exercise state is highly variable and compensatory eating – i.e., (over-) compensation of the expended energy via increased post-exercise energy intake – occurs in some individuals but not others. We aimed to identify predictors of post-exercise energy intake and compensati...

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Veröffentlicht in:Appetite 2023-05, Vol.184, p.106520-106520, Article 106520
Hauptverfasser: Höchsmann, Christoph, Beckford, Safiya E., French, Jeffrey A., Boron, Julie B., Stevens, Jeffrey R., Koehler, Karsten
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Energy intake in the post-exercise state is highly variable and compensatory eating – i.e., (over-) compensation of the expended energy via increased post-exercise energy intake – occurs in some individuals but not others. We aimed to identify predictors of post-exercise energy intake and compensation. In a randomized crossover design, 57 healthy participants (21.7 [SD = 2.5] years; 23.7 [SD = 2.3] kg/m2, 75% White, 54% female) completed two laboratory-based test-meals following (1) 45-min exercise and (2) 45-min rest (control). We assessed associations between biological (sex, body composition, appetite hormones) and behavioral (habitual exercise via prospective exercise log, eating behavior traits) characteristics at baseline and total energy intake, relative energy intake (intake – exercise expenditure), and the difference between post-exercise and post-rest intake. We found a differential impact of biological and behavioral characteristics on total post-exercise energy intake in men and women. In men, only fasting (baseline) concentrations of appetite-regulating hormones (peptide YY [PYY, β = 0.88, P  0.51). Our results show that biological and behavioral characteristics differentially affect total and relative post-exercise energy intake in men and women. This may help identify individuals who are more likely to compensate for the energy expended in exercise. Targeted countermeasures to prevent compensatory energy intake after exercise should take the demonstrated sex differences into account. [Display omitted]
ISSN:0195-6663
1095-8304
DOI:10.1016/j.appet.2023.106520