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Effect of a high-fat meal on the growth hormone response to exercise in children.
      

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Title:Effect of a high-fat meal on the growth hormone response to exercise in children.
Author: Galassetti,-P; Larson,-J; Iwanaga,-K; Salsberg,-S-L; Eliakim,-A; Pontello,-A
Citation: J-Pediatr-Endocrinol-Metab. 2006 Jun; 19(6): 777-86
Abstract: Exercise-induced growth hormone (GH) secretion may significantly modulate growth and development in children. Altered physiological GH responses, therefore, may reduce the beneficial effects of exercise. High-fat food ingestion before exercise blunts the GH response in adults, but it is unknown whether this occurs in children. We therefore performed standard exercise tests, following a high-fat meal or placebo, in 12 children, age 11-15 (6 M, 6 F). GH, insulin-like growth factor-I, glucose, insulin, glucagon, cortisol, epinephrine and interleukin-6 samples were drawn at baseline, end-exercise, and 30 and 60 min post-exercise. While GH was similar at baseline in all experiments, the exercise-induced GH peak was lower after the high-fat meal (6.7 +/- 1.6 ng/l vs 11.8 +/- 2.4 ng/l, p <0.02). Other exercise responses were not affected by prior fat ingestion. A high-fat meal before exercise, therefore (a common event in Western societies), may reduce the growth factor response to exercise in children, with potential implications for growth and development.
Review References: None
Notes: None
Language: English
Publication Type: Controlled-Clinical-Trial; Journal-Article
Keywords:*Diet,-Atherogenic; *Dietary-Fats-pharmacology; *Exercise-Test; *Growth-Hormone-blood
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