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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05420181

Prolonged Overnight Fast, Energy Metabolism and Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Sensitivity

The Effect of Prolonged Overnight Fast on Postprandial Energy Metabolism and Skeletal Muscle Anabolic Sensitivity in Healthy Humans

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
9 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Nottingham · Academic / Other
Sex
Male
Age
18 Years – 35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Recent research shows that timing of nutritional intake and daily periods of fasting may have important health effects. In humans, limiting daily food intake to a narrow window (typically \~8 hours) can bring about some beneficial changes in blood concentrations of fats, sugar and the hormone insulin. It is thought that many of these changes are due to the prolonged daily fasting periods and humans will have regularly experienced prolonged fasting periods throughout evolution. In the modern era, food access is widely available and it is not uncommon for the time between breakfast and a late night snack to exceed 14 hours. We have recently shown that extending habitual daily periods of fasting to 16 hours per day also improves the ability of skeletal muscle to take up amino acids, the building blocks of protein. We are interested in studying whether a single episode of prolonged overnight fast (\~16 hours), when compared to a normal overnight fast of 10 hours, is sufficient to stimulate skeletal muscle protein synthesis in response to dietary protein ingestion in healthy humans.

Detailed description

There is a growing interest in the cardiometabolic benefits of various intermittent fasting paradigms (such as alternate day fasting and the 5:2 fast diet), where periods of normal energy intake are punctuated by periods of energy restriction or fasting. A recent alternative to these protocols is time-restricted feeding (TRF), which limits daily food/energy intake to a narrow window (typically 8 to 10h). The major strength of TRF is that it extends the duration of overnight fast without limiting normal calorie intake. Recent evidence from both animal and human studies have shown that habitual daily periods of fasting of as little as 16h can reduce fasting insulin and triglycerides levels, protect against excessive body weight gain in response to high fat and sucrose diets, better maintain fat-free mass, and improve beta-cell responsiveness. We recently completed a 2-week TRF intervention study using the 8h fed (between 8am and 4pm)/16h fast protocol in healthy individuals and found improvements in insulin sensitivity and skeletal muscle uptake of branched chain amino acids. As we did not make measurements of muscle protein synthesis, it is not known whether a single episode of prolonged overnight fast (\~16h) is sufficient to elicit improvements in insulin sensitivity and stimulate skeletal muscle protein synthesis in response to dietary protein ingestion. The aim of the proposed study is to investigate the effect of prolonged overnight fast (16h vs. 10h) on postprandial energy metabolism and skeletal muscle protein synthesis in healthy humans.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERShort 10hr fastParticipants will fast from 11pm the night before the study day
OTHERLong 16h fastParticipants will fast from 5pm the night before the study day

Timeline

Start date
2019-05-30
Primary completion
2024-03-19
Completion
2024-03-19
First posted
2022-06-15
Last updated
2025-11-24

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05420181. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.