The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters

<p>Twelve male weight lifters were used to study the effect of oral arginine consumption on growth hormone (hGH) , arginine (Arg), and somatomedin (IGF-1) concentrations. Subjects were randomly assigned to treatment or placebo groups. Following a week of controlled exercise and diet, fasted su...

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Main Author: Fild, Deborah S.
Other Authors: Education
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45993
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020056/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-459932021-05-08T05:27:08Z The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters Fild, Deborah S. Education Rankin, Janet L. Walberg Impara, James C. Denbow, D. Michael LD5655.V855 1991.F554 Amino acids -- Metabolism Weight lifters Weight lifting <p>Twelve male weight lifters were used to study the effect of oral arginine consumption on growth hormone (hGH) , arginine (Arg), and somatomedin (IGF-1) concentrations. Subjects were randomly assigned to treatment or placebo groups. Following a week of controlled exercise and diet, fasted subjects took either an acute dose of arginine hydrochloride or casein (placebo), at 0.1 g/kg BW. Blood samples were drawn every 15 min, for 90 min after ingestion. All samples were analyzed for hGH and Arg, and IGF-1 was measured in the baseline sample. Subjects then underwent 10 days of caloric restriction, consuming a liquid diet of 22 kcal/kg BW/d. Subjects took either arginine or casein supplements in two doses of 0.1 g/kg BW twice daily, for a total dose of 0.2 g/kg BW/d. The weight lifting protocol remained unchanged. On day 17, subjects were again tested for the acute response to a single dose of 0.1 g/kg BW supplement (arginine or placebo) over 90 min. Blood was collected and analyzed as before. No change in hGH and Arg occurred 90 min after consumption of the arginine supplement, regardless of dietary condition. However, arginine supplementation caused overall higher hGH and Arg levels (2.64 ng/ml and 0.87 mmol/l) compared to placebo (1.36 ng/ml and 0.71 mmol/l) during caloric restriction. IGF-1 did not change in either group under either diet. Thus, oral arginine supplementation at 0.1 g/kg BW did not produce a rise in hGH or Arg after 90 min, and did not affect overall hGH status, as measured by IGF-1, during energy restriction and supplementation.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:50:34Z 2014-03-14T21:50:34Z 1991-04-05 2009-11-24 2009-11-24 2009-11-24 Thesis Text etd-11242009-020056 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45993 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020056/ en OCLC# 24619910 LD5655.V855_1991.F554.pdf viii, 125 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1991.F554
Amino acids -- Metabolism
Weight lifters
Weight lifting
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1991.F554
Amino acids -- Metabolism
Weight lifters
Weight lifting
Fild, Deborah S.
The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
description <p>Twelve male weight lifters were used to study the effect of oral arginine consumption on growth hormone (hGH) , arginine (Arg), and somatomedin (IGF-1) concentrations. Subjects were randomly assigned to treatment or placebo groups. Following a week of controlled exercise and diet, fasted subjects took either an acute dose of arginine hydrochloride or casein (placebo), at 0.1 g/kg BW. Blood samples were drawn every 15 min, for 90 min after ingestion. All samples were analyzed for hGH and Arg, and IGF-1 was measured in the baseline sample. Subjects then underwent 10 days of caloric restriction, consuming a liquid diet of 22 kcal/kg BW/d. Subjects took either arginine or casein supplements in two doses of 0.1 g/kg BW twice daily, for a total dose of 0.2 g/kg BW/d. The weight lifting protocol remained unchanged. On day 17, subjects were again tested for the acute response to a single dose of 0.1 g/kg BW supplement (arginine or placebo) over 90 min. Blood was collected and analyzed as before. No change in hGH and Arg occurred 90 min after consumption of the arginine supplement, regardless of dietary condition. However, arginine supplementation caused overall higher hGH and Arg levels (2.64 ng/ml and 0.87 mmol/l) compared to placebo (1.36 ng/ml and 0.71 mmol/l) during caloric restriction. IGF-1 did not change in either group under either diet. Thus, oral arginine supplementation at 0.1 g/kg BW did not produce a rise in hGH or Arg after 90 min, and did not affect overall hGH status, as measured by IGF-1, during energy restriction and supplementation.</p> === Master of Science
author2 Education
author_facet Education
Fild, Deborah S.
author Fild, Deborah S.
author_sort Fild, Deborah S.
title The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
title_short The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
title_full The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
title_fullStr The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
title_full_unstemmed The effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
title_sort effects of oral arginine supplementation on growth hormone, arginine, and somatomedin levels during energy restriction in male weight lifters
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45993
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020056/
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