Earlier
studies published by a UB research group headed by David Pendergast,
Ed.D., professor of physiology and biophysics, reported that competitive
runners who increased the proportion of fat in their diets improved
their endurance with no negative effect on weight, body composition,
blood pressure, pulse rate or total cholesterol. (See editor's
note)
However,
since a high level of fat was thought to be immunosuppressive,
the researchers sought to determine if increasing dietary fat
would compromise various elements of the immune system, while
improving performance.
"In
general, moderate levels of exercise are known to enhance the
immune system," said Venkatraman. "But high-intensity
exercise and endurance exercise produce excess levels of free
radicals, which may place stress on the immune system.
"Since
we have shown that athletes perform better on a higher-fat diet
than on a low-fat diet, it was important to determine if the higher-fat
diet would further compromise the immune system," she said.
"We found that it did not, but the very-low-fat diet did."
The
study involved six female and eight male competitive runners who
trained at 40 miles a week and were part of a larger performance
study. They spent a month on their normal diets, followed by a
month each on diets composed of approximately 17 percent, 32 percent
and 41 percent fat. Protein remained stable at 15 percent and
carbohydrates made up the difference.
The
immune status of the runners was obtained by analyzing concentrations
of essential components of the immune system -- leukocytes, cytokines
and plasma cortisol -- in blood samples taken before and after
an endurance exercise test. The tests were conducted at the end
of each four-week diet period.
Results
showed that natural killer cells, a type of leukocyte and one
of the body's defense mechanisms marshaled to fight infection,
were more than doubled in runners after the high-fat diet, compared
to the low-fat regimen. Levels of PGE2, inflammation-causing prostaglandins,
increased after the endurance test and were higher when the runners
were on the low-fat diet.
This
study is part of a larger investigation to determine the effects
of dietary fat on performance, biochemical and nutritional status,
and plasma lipids and lipoprotein profiles in distance runners
being conducted by a study group composed of -- in addition to
Venkatraman and Pendergast -- Peter Horvath, Ph.D., associate
professor in the UB Department of Physical Therapy, Exercise and
Nutrition Sciences, and John Leddy, M.D., clinical professor of
orthopaedics and associate director of the UB Sports Medicine
Institute.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by University
At Buffalo, www.buffalo.edu.
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