A Randomized Trial of Healthy Weight Gain in Athletic Individuals

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2024-08-01

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Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins

Abstract

Many athletes desire weight gain, ideally as lean body mass (LBM), to improve athletic performance. These athletes are commonly encouraged to increase energy intake by ∼500 kcal·d-1 with emphasis on adequate protein, carbohydrate, and judicious inclusion of healthy fat-containing energy-dense foods, such as peanuts/peanut butter, along with rigorous resistance training (RT). These guidelines target gains of ∼0.23 kg·wk-1. However, little is known about the efficacy of such regimens. Purpose The purpose of this study is to evaluate the outcomes of a 10-wk diet and exercise regimen designed to promote healthy weight gain with excess energy from peanut-containing or high-carbohydrate foods. Methods Nineteen male and 13 female athletes were randomly assigned to receive an additional 500 kcal·d-1 above typical intake through provision of either peanut-based whole foods/snacks (PNT group) or a similar, high-carbohydrate, peanut-free snack (CHO group) along with supervised, whole-body RT (3 d·wk-1 for 60-120 min). Body composition was assessed by dual-energyx-ray absorptiometry at baseline and postintervention. Results Total body mass (TBM) increased 2.2 ± 1.3 kg with 1.5 ± 1.1 kg as LBM after week 10. The PNT group (n = 16; 27 ± 7 yr; 10 men, 6 women) gained less TBM than the CHO group (n = 16; 23 ± 3 yr; 9 men, 7 women) (1.6 ± 1.1 kg vs 2.7 ± 1.2 kg, respectively, P = 0.007) with no differences in LBM (1.2 ± 1.1 kg vs 1.9 ± 1.0 kg, P = 0.136). Conclusions These results suggest that the addition of 500 kcal·d-1 from whole foods/snacks in combination with a rigorous RT program promotes a similar weight gain of ∼0.22 kg·wk-1, primarily as LBM, over 10 wk in both male and female athletes. However, snack macronutrient content may impact the effectiveness of this regimen.

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