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© 2006 American Society for Nutrition J. Nutr. 136:2123-2126, August 2006


Recent Advances in Nutritional Sciences

Interplay of Stress and Physical Inactivity on Muscle Loss: Nutritional Countermeasures1,2

Douglas Paddon-Jones*

The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX 77550

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: djpaddon{at}utmb.edu.

Inactivity-mediated protein catabolism occurs in many circumstances ranging from catastrophic events such as severe illness or injury, to unique environments such as spaceflight/microgravity, to more insidious causes such as physical frailty and the progression of aging. Nevertheless, regardless of the etiology, the consequences of inactivity are readily observable and debilitating. Mechanistically, the loss of lean body mass during inactivity is the result of a chronic imbalance between muscle protein synthesis and breakdown. When inactivity is accompanied by the stress of trauma or disease, the rate of muscle protein catabolism can increase several fold. Bed rest studies in healthy volunteers provide a unique opportunity to examine the mechanisms contributing to muscle loss and evaluate strategies for intervention that may slow muscle catabolism and promote anabolism. The prerequisite for muscle protein synthesis and the most readily adaptable stimulus is dietary-derived amino acids. This review focuses on the role of amino acid supplementation in the maintenance of skeletal muscle mass during age-related and clinically mandated inactivity.





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