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ORIGINAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATION |
1 From the School of Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences, Bangor University, George Building, Bangor, Gwynedd, United Kingdom (JHM and SJO), and Medical Expeditions, Pinfold, Hyssington, Montgomery, Powys, United Kingdom (JHM, SJO, KH, SS, ZS, CW, DY, HG, ES, ER, DM, JL, and EC).
2 This work is the opinion of the authors and not that of Science in Sport or Ministry of Defence (Army). 3 Portions of this manuscript were presented in abstract form at the Medical Expeditions Altitude Symposium December 4, 2008, and at Hypoxia March 11–14, 2009. 4 Supported by Science in Sport (dietary intervention and placebo, funding for outcome measures), Ministry of Defence (Army) (funding for outcome measures), Mountain Equipment (researcher personal equipment), Panasonic United Kingdom (Toughbook laptops), Qatar Airways (Carriage), Polar United Kingdom, Optimal Performance, nSpire Health Inc, Vitech Scientific, and Digitalscales.com (scientific equipment). 5 Address reprint requests and correspondence to JH Macdonald, School of Sport, Health and Exercise Sciences, Bangor University, George Building, Bangor, Gwynedd, LL57 2PZ, United Kingdom. E-mail: j.h.macdonald{at}bangor.ac.uk.
Background: Body mass loss is inevitable with chronic hypoxic exposure. However, the exact body-composition changes, their causes, and possible treatments remain unknown.
Objective: The objective was to investigate body composition during a high-altitude expedition by using non–empirically derived methods, experimentally manipulating energy intake, and investigating the influence of initial body composition.
Design: Forty-one participants completed a 21-d expedition in the Himalayas. Energy intake was manipulated with a double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomized trial of carbohydrate energy supplementation. Body composition was assessed before and after the expedition by using a 4-component model including fat mass, total body water, bone mineral mass, and residual mass (principally protein and glycogen). Data were analyzed by repeated-measures analysis of variance.
Results: Participants allocated to receive carbohydrate were given an additional 15,058 ± 6211 kcal over the 21-d expedition (>6 kcal · kg–1 · d–1). Nevertheless, the functionally important residual mass decreased in both groups by 6% (main effect of time: P = 0.021), with no effect of allocation (interaction effect: P = 0.116). Similar decreases were observed for fat mass (11%) and total body water (3%), which were also unabated by allocation. Furthermore, high initial fat mass (by median split) did not preserve residual mass (high-fat compared with low-fat participants: residual loss = 5% compared with 8%; P = 0.990).
Conclusions: High-altitude exposure decreased body mass, including the functionally important residual component. These losses were not abated by increasing energy intake or an initially high fat mass. Factors other than negative energy balance must contribute to body-composition changes with chronic hypoxia. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00731510.
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