The acute effect of exercise modality and nutrition manipulations on post-exercise resting energy expenditure and respiratory exchange ratio in women: a randomized trial
Hailee L Wingfield, Abbie E Smith-Ryan, Malia N Melvin, Erica J Roelofs, Eric T Trexler, Anthony C Hackney, Mark A Weaver, Eric D Ryan

TL;DR
This study found that high-intensity interval training and protein intake before exercise boost energy expenditure and shift metabolism in women after working out.
Contribution
The study is the first to compare the acute effects of different exercise types and pre-exercise nutrition on post-exercise energy expenditure and metabolism in women.
Findings
HIIT increased resting energy expenditure more than other exercise types after exercise.
Protein ingestion before exercise raised post-exercise energy expenditure and lowered respiratory exchange ratio compared to carbohydrates.
HIIT lowered respiratory exchange ratio more than other exercises at 30 and 60 minutes post-exercise.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the effect of exercise modality and pre-exercise carbohydrate (CHO) or protein (PRO) ingestion on post-exercise resting energy expenditure (REE) and respiratory exchange ratio (RER) in women. Twenty recreationally active women (mean ± SD; age 24.6 ± 3.9 years; height 164.4 ± 6.6 cm; weight 62.7 ± 6.6 kg) participated in this randomized, crossover, double-blind study. Each participant completed six exercise sessions, consisting of three exercise modalities: aerobic endurance exercise (AEE), high-intensity interval running (HIIT), and high-intensity resistance training (HIRT); and two acute nutritional interventions: CHO and PRO. Salivary samples were collected before each exercise session to determine estradiol-β-17 and before and after to quantify cortisol. Post-exercise REE and RER were analyzed via indirect calorimetry at the following:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiology practices and education · Radiology practices and education · Medical Coding and Health Information
