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Impact of Protein Content of Milk on Post-Exercise Appetite and Energy Intake

H

Hacettepe University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Post-exercise
Energy Intake
Negative Energy Balance
Appetite

Treatments

Behavioral: The study will investigate how different amounts of protein (0 g, 15 g, and 30 g) in post-exercise beverages affect appetite and energy intake following endurance exercise.

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07050017
SBF-25-059

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to investigate the acute effects of consuming milk beverages with different protein content on subjective appetite and energy intake in healthy adults following endurance exercise. Participants will complete an endurance exercise protocol and then consume one of three beverages: a high-protein milk, a regular-protein milk, or an isoenergetic and isovolumetric carbohydrate control drink. Subjective appetite ratings will be assessed using visual analogue scales (VAS) at multiple time points after beverage consumption. Appetite-related hormonal responses, including insulin and acylated ghrelin, will be measured via blood samples. Energy intake will be assessed through an ad libitum test meal. This study will help determine whether different types of milk consumed post-exercise influence appetite regulation, hormonal response, and subsequent energy intake.

Full description

The primary objective of this randomized, double-blind, crossover clinical trial is to evaluate the acute effects of post-endurance exercise consumption of milk beverages with varying protein content on subjective appetite, circulating appetite-related hormones, and subsequent ad libitum energy intake in healthy, recreationally active adult males. The study will recruit at least 12 healthy male participants aged 18-39 years who have been regularly engaged in endurance-based physical activity (e.g., cycling, running, triathlon, orienteering, team sports) for a minimum of one year, with a training frequency of at least three sessions per week lasting 60-90 minutes each. Participants will complete five laboratory visits under a crossover design with a minimum one-week washout period between intervention conditions. The first two sessions will consist of pre-study visits (screening, anthropometric assessments, VO₂max testing, and familiarization). The remaining three visits will involve the ingestion of one of the following beverages in a randomized order: standard-protein milk (0 g protein), high-protein milk (30 g protein), or an isoenergetic carbohydrate-based control beverage (0 g protein). All beverages will be isocaloric and isovolumetric and provided in opaque bottles to ensure double-blind conditions. On each intervention day, participants will perform a steady-state endurance exercise protocol using a calibrated cycle ergometer, followed immediately by the ingestion of one of the test beverages. Appetite will be assessed subjectively using validated Visual Analogue Scales (VAS) at predefined intervals. Venous blood samples will be collected to analyze concentrations of insulin and acylated ghrelin as objective biomarkers of appetite regulation. One hour after beverage consumption, an ad libitum test meal will be provided to quantify subsequent energy intake. The total caloric intake and macronutrient distribution will be recorded and analyzed. This study is designed to provide insight into the role of post-exercise milk consumption-specifically the influence of protein content-on short-term appetite modulation and energy intake regulation in recreationally trained individuals.

Enrollment

16 patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 39 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • The study will include healthy, physically active male participants aged 18-39 years who have been engaging in recreational endurance sports (such as cycling, running, triathlon, orienteering, or team sports) for at least one year, with a minimum frequency of 3 sessions per week lasting 60-90 minutes.

Exclusion criteria

  • Current smoker
  • Chronic or excessive alcohol consumption
  • Use of supplements and/or chronic medications that may affect appetite
  • Presence of cardiac, hepatic, renal, pulmonary, neurological, hematological, gastrointestinal, diabetic, thyroid, or psychiatric disorders, and/or musculoskeletal conditions that may limit exercise participation
  • Allergy or intolerance to any of the foods or beverages to be consumed during the study
  • Unstable body weight (e.g., weight loss greater than 1 kg in the past week)
  • Currently following a weight-loss diet
  • Diagnosed eating disorders or individuals who cognitively restrict food intake (to be assessed using the Three-Factor Eating Questionnaire)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

16 participants in 3 patient groups

carbohydrate control drink: isoenergetic and isovolumetric with milk beverages.
Active Comparator group
Description:
Isoenergetic and isovolumetric with milk beverages
Treatment:
Behavioral: The study will investigate how different amounts of protein (0 g, 15 g, and 30 g) in post-exercise beverages affect appetite and energy intake following endurance exercise.
regular milk
Experimental group
Description:
containing 15 g protein
Treatment:
Behavioral: The study will investigate how different amounts of protein (0 g, 15 g, and 30 g) in post-exercise beverages affect appetite and energy intake following endurance exercise.
high-protein milk
Experimental group
Description:
containing 30 g protein
Treatment:
Behavioral: The study will investigate how different amounts of protein (0 g, 15 g, and 30 g) in post-exercise beverages affect appetite and energy intake following endurance exercise.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

mehmet fisunoğlu, Associate Professor; elif tunçil, Research Assistant

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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