1997
DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-972640
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Physical Performance and Metabolic Recovery Among Lean, Healthy Men Following a Prolonged Energy Deficit

Abstract: Previous studies have demonstrated that full recovery from weight loss may take months or years. The present investigation examined short-term recovery (5 wks "post") of physical performance (muscular strength, muscular power, vertical jump), body composition, metabolic hormones (testosterone, luteinizing hormone, sex hormone binding globulin, insulin-like growth factor-1, triiodothyronine, thyroxine, thyroid binding globulin, and thyroid-stimulating hormone) and metabolic markers (transferrin, ferritin, preal… Show more

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Cited by 124 publications
(175 citation statements)
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References 22 publications
(8 reference statements)
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“…In more recent years, similar body weight and fat overshooting have also been reported in young men at the US Army Ranger School recovering from about 12% of weight lost following 8-9 weeks of training in a multistressor environment that includes energy deficit and sleep deprivation (36)(37)(38) . Nindl et al (36) found that at week 5 in the post-training recovery phase, body weight had overshot by 5 kg, reflected primarily in large gains in fat mass, with all ten subjects showing higher fat mass than before weight lost.…”
Section: The Army Ranger Multi-stressor Experimentssupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…In more recent years, similar body weight and fat overshooting have also been reported in young men at the US Army Ranger School recovering from about 12% of weight lost following 8-9 weeks of training in a multistressor environment that includes energy deficit and sleep deprivation (36)(37)(38) . Nindl et al (36) found that at week 5 in the post-training recovery phase, body weight had overshot by 5 kg, reflected primarily in large gains in fat mass, with all ten subjects showing higher fat mass than before weight lost.…”
Section: The Army Ranger Multi-stressor Experimentssupporting
confidence: 60%
“…Nindl et al (36) found that at week 5 in the post-training recovery phase, body weight had overshot by 5 kg, reflected primarily in large gains in fat mass, with all ten subjects showing higher fat mass than before weight lost. Similarly, in young male volunteers participating in another 8-week US Army Ranger course that involved four repeated cycles of restricted energy intake and refeeding, Friedl et al (38) found that more weight was regained than lost at week 5 of recovery following training cessation, with fat overshooting representing an increase of 40 % in body fat above pre-training levels.…”
Section: The Army Ranger Multi-stressor Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The physiological strain produced by these operational stressors can have deleterious effects on muscle mass, endocrine and metabolic function, as well as physical and mental performance (Friedl et al, 1994;Friedl, 1999;Friedl et al, 2000;Nindl et al, 1997;Nindl et al, 2002;Nindl et al, 2003a;Nindl et al, 2003b) (see Figure 1). A goal of the Army Medical Research and Materiel Command's (MRMC) biomedical research program is to identify useful biomarkers that are indicative of nutritional and physiological status that can be assessed rapidly, with minimally or non-invasive collection methods.…”
Section: Military Relevance Of Monitoring Insulin-like Growth Factor-imentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Friedl and colleagues performed experimental studies characterizing the physiological responses of soldiers participating in the U.S. Army Ranger Training Course (Friedl et al, 1994;Friedl et al, 2000;Nindl et al, 1997). The data provide insight into the adaptive process that occurs as soldiers cope with sustained physical work, energy restriction and sleep disruption.…”
Section: Us Army Ranger Trainingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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