Status
Conditions
Treatments
Study type
Funder types
Identifiers
About
Despite the demonstrable health and quality of life benefits, there are unknowns within consequences of obesity surgery. Weight loss composition is poorly understood. The objective is to have a significant loss of body fat and a limited loss of muscular weight.
A cohort study in the nutrition unit at Toulouse University Hospital shows that 3 months and 1 year after surgery, there are 2 phenotypes of patients. The first one is called 'little loss' and is defined by a contribution of muscular weight lower than 15% of the total weight loss. The other one is called 'big loss' and is defined by a contribution of muscular weight higher than 15% of the total weight loss. Causes of these different phenotypes are unknown for the moment.
Some amino acids have an anabolic potential. Leucine induces a muscular protein synthesis in clinical situations like hepatic cirrhosis, and some populations like new born and older people.
Assuming that, a leucine-enriched essential amino acid supplementation will have a benefit effect on the muscular mass. That is testing the influence of the quality of protein consumed, more than the quantity. An anabolic substance (amino acid here) can lead to gain of muscle only if it is associated to regular physical training, all patients will follow a physical training.
Full description
An excessive loss of lean mass could have negative metabolic consequences. Indeed, lean mass is an essential determinant of weight loss and of the glycaemia regulation. An important loss of muscular mass could expose the person to a reduction of quality of life (because of fatigue), or even a functional loss. Muscles are important for insulin sensibility and glucose metabolism. Muscles are proteolysis target and proteins will be used as sources of amino acid for other cellular functions.
Changes in lean mass have been at the centre of several studies, but changes in muscular mass after bariatric surgery have been report only one time.
A cohort study in the nutrition unit at Toulouse University Hospital shows that 3 months and 1 year after surgery, there are 2 phenotypes of patients. The first one is called 'little loss' and is defined by a contribution of muscular weight lower than 15% of the total weight loss. The other one is called 'big loss' and is defined by a contribution of muscular weight higher than 15% of the total weight loss. Causes of these different phenotypes are unknown for the moment. Nothing distinguishes them before the surgery. Type of surgery, gender, protein intake (in grams of proteins intake per day) do not appear to have a determining influence about the intensity of muscle mass loss. The only other study published shows changes in muscular mass about 15% at 6 weeks.
Relation between glycaemia changes and muscle mass changes suggests that patients with modest changes in muscular mass are patients who have the best improvement of glycaemia after surgery. It is the reason why, it could be interesting to preserve muscular mass.
Nowadays, there is no consensual strategy to compensate this loss of muscle mass. It is important to have in the same time an anabolic stimulus (training, hormone...) and a sufficient energy and protein intake.
According to a recent study which compares leucine intake with placebo during weight loss driven by a low-calorie diet associated to a muscle strengthening exercises, patients loss the same weight, but leucin group is gaining lean mass, while placebo group is losing it. Accordingly, twe different doses of amino acid will be tested of those used as diet supplement.
This study is testing the influence of the quality of protein consumed, more than the quantity. Patients will take leucine-enriched amino acid supplement and follow physical training. Aromatic amino acid supplementation showed an anabolic effect in older people, undernourished children and undernourished patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. There are no known side effects. This amino acid supplementation has not been evaluated in post-obesity surgery context.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
6 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal