Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake

This study investigated the acute influence of exercise on eating behaviour in an ecologically valid setting whereby healthy active males were permitted complete ad libitum access to food. Ten healthy males completed two, 8 h trials (exercise and control) in a randomised-crossover design. In the exe...

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Main Authors: James King, Lucy K. Wasse, David Stensel
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Published: 2013
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2134/12256
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spelling rr-article-96249652013-01-01T00:00:00Z Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake James King (1252200) Lucy K. Wasse (7236983) David Stensel (1257075) Other health sciences not elsewhere classified Exercise Appetite Hunger Energy intake Food intake Feeding latency Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified This study investigated the acute influence of exercise on eating behaviour in an ecologically valid setting whereby healthy active males were permitted complete ad libitum access to food. Ten healthy males completed two, 8 h trials (exercise and control) in a randomised-crossover design. In the exercise trials participants consumed a breakfast snack and then rested for 1 h before undertaking a 60 min run (72% of V˙O2 max) on a treadmill. Participants then rested in the laboratory for 6 h during which time they were permitted complete ad libitum access to a buffet meal. The timing of meals, energy/macronutrient intake and eating frequency were assessed. Identical procedures were completed in the control trial except no exercise was performed. Exercise increased the length of time (35 min) before participants voluntarily requested to eat afterwards. Despite this, energy intake at the first meal consumed, or at subsequent eating episodes, was not influenced by exercise (total trial energy intake: control 7426 kJ, exercise 7418 kJ). Neither was there any difference in macronutrient intake or meal frequency between trials. These results confirm that food intake remains unaffected by exercise in the immediate hours after but suggest that exercise may invoke a delay before food is desired. 2013-01-01T00:00:00Z Text Journal contribution 2134/12256 https://figshare.com/articles/journal_contribution/Acute_exercise_increases_feeding_latency_in_healthy_normal_weight_young_males_but_does_not_alter_energy_intake/9624965 CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
institution Loughborough University
collection Figshare
topic Other health sciences not elsewhere classified
Exercise
Appetite
Hunger
Energy intake
Food intake
Feeding latency
Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified
spellingShingle Other health sciences not elsewhere classified
Exercise
Appetite
Hunger
Energy intake
Food intake
Feeding latency
Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified
James King
Lucy K. Wasse
David Stensel
Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
description This study investigated the acute influence of exercise on eating behaviour in an ecologically valid setting whereby healthy active males were permitted complete ad libitum access to food. Ten healthy males completed two, 8 h trials (exercise and control) in a randomised-crossover design. In the exercise trials participants consumed a breakfast snack and then rested for 1 h before undertaking a 60 min run (72% of V˙O2 max) on a treadmill. Participants then rested in the laboratory for 6 h during which time they were permitted complete ad libitum access to a buffet meal. The timing of meals, energy/macronutrient intake and eating frequency were assessed. Identical procedures were completed in the control trial except no exercise was performed. Exercise increased the length of time (35 min) before participants voluntarily requested to eat afterwards. Despite this, energy intake at the first meal consumed, or at subsequent eating episodes, was not influenced by exercise (total trial energy intake: control 7426 kJ, exercise 7418 kJ). Neither was there any difference in macronutrient intake or meal frequency between trials. These results confirm that food intake remains unaffected by exercise in the immediate hours after but suggest that exercise may invoke a delay before food is desired.
format Default
Article
author James King
Lucy K. Wasse
David Stensel
author_facet James King
Lucy K. Wasse
David Stensel
author_sort James King (1252200)
title Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
title_short Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
title_full Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
title_fullStr Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
title_full_unstemmed Acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
title_sort acute exercise increases feeding latency in healthy normal weight young males but does not alter energy intake
publishDate 2013
url https://hdl.handle.net/2134/12256
_version_ 1797468835550330880