Maintaining adequate daily protein intake is important to maintain muscle mass throughout the lifespan. In this regard, the overnight period has been identified as a window of opportunity to increase protein intake in the elderly. However, it is unknown whether pre-sleep protein intake affects next-morning appetite and, consequently, protein intake. Therefore, the purpose of the current study was to investigate the effects of a pre-sleep protein drink on next-morning appetite, energy intake and metabolism. Twelve older individuals (eight males, four females; age: 71.3 ± 4.2 years) took part in a single-blind randomised cross-over study. After a standardised dinner, participants consumed either a 40-g protein drink, isocaloric maltodextrin d...
Background: A protein intake of 30-40 g per meal is suggested to maximally stimulate muscle protein ...
Background: Protein-rich supplements are used widely to prevent and manage malnutrition in older adu...
Daily distribution of dietary protein may be important in protecting against sarcopenia, specificall...
Background: Appetite, energy intake and dietary protein intake tend to decrease with age and may con...
Ageing is associated with a reduction in muscle mass and strength, termed sarcopenia. Dietary protei...
Ageing is associated with a reduction in muscle mass and strength, termed sarcopenia. Dietary protei...
Background: The loss of skeletal muscle mass with aging has been attributed to the blunted anabolic ...
Abstract Background: The loss of skeletal muscle mass with aging has been attributed to the blunted ...
Background: The age-related decline in skeletal muscle mass is partly attributed to anabolic resista...
Age related muscle wasting leads to overall reductions of lean body mass, reduced muscle strength, a...
peer-reviewedBackground: Limited data are available examining dietary interventions for optimizing p...
This review provides an update on recent research assessing the effect of pre-sleep protein ingestio...
This review provides an update on recent research assessing the effect of pre-sleep protein ingestio...
Introduction: A protein intake of 25–30 g per meal is suggested to maximally stimulate muscle protei...
Background: A protein intake of 30-40 g per meal is suggested to maximally stimulate muscle protein ...
Background: Protein-rich supplements are used widely to prevent and manage malnutrition in older adu...
Daily distribution of dietary protein may be important in protecting against sarcopenia, specificall...
Background: Appetite, energy intake and dietary protein intake tend to decrease with age and may con...
Ageing is associated with a reduction in muscle mass and strength, termed sarcopenia. Dietary protei...
Ageing is associated with a reduction in muscle mass and strength, termed sarcopenia. Dietary protei...
Background: The loss of skeletal muscle mass with aging has been attributed to the blunted anabolic ...
Abstract Background: The loss of skeletal muscle mass with aging has been attributed to the blunted ...
Background: The age-related decline in skeletal muscle mass is partly attributed to anabolic resista...
Age related muscle wasting leads to overall reductions of lean body mass, reduced muscle strength, a...
peer-reviewedBackground: Limited data are available examining dietary interventions for optimizing p...
This review provides an update on recent research assessing the effect of pre-sleep protein ingestio...
This review provides an update on recent research assessing the effect of pre-sleep protein ingestio...
Introduction: A protein intake of 25–30 g per meal is suggested to maximally stimulate muscle protei...
Background: A protein intake of 30-40 g per meal is suggested to maximally stimulate muscle protein ...
Background: Protein-rich supplements are used widely to prevent and manage malnutrition in older adu...
Daily distribution of dietary protein may be important in protecting against sarcopenia, specificall...