4.7 Article

Vitamin D3 supplementation does not enhance the effects of resistance training in older adults

Journal

JOURNAL OF CACHEXIA SARCOPENIA AND MUSCLE
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages 599-628

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcsm.12688

Keywords

Strength training; Cholecalciferol; Muscle plasticity

Funding

  1. Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, Innlandet Hospital Trust [150339]
  2. Regional Research Fund Inland Norway [298419]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study findings suggest that vitamin D-3 supplementation does not significantly affect muscular responses to resistance training in older adults with or without COPD.
Background Lifestyle therapy with resistance training is a potent measure to counteract age-related loss in muscle strength and mass. Unfortunately, many individuals fail to respond in the expected manner. This phenomenon is particularly common among older adults and those with chronic diseases (e.g. chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, COPD) and may involve endocrine variables such as vitamin D. At present, the effects of vitamin D supplementation on responses to resistance training remain largely unexplored. Methods Ninety-five male and female participants (healthy, n = 71; COPD, n = 24; age 68 +/- 5 years) were randomly assigned to receive either vitamin D-3 or placebo supplementation for 28 weeks in a double-blinded manner (latitude 61 degrees N, September-May). Seventy-eight participants completed the RCT, which was initiated by 12 weeks of supplementation-only (two weeks with 10 000 IU/day, followed by 2000 IU/day), followed by 13 weeks of combined supplementation (2000 IU/day) and supervised whole-body resistance training (twice weekly), interspersed with testing and measurements. Outcome measures included multiple assessments of muscle strength (n(variables) = 7), endurance performance (n = 6), and muscle mass (n = 3, legs, primary), as well as muscle quality (legs), muscle biology (m. vastus lateralis; muscle fibre characteristics, transcriptome), and health-related variables (e.g. visceral fat mass and blood lipid profile). For main outcome domains such as muscle strength and muscle mass, weighted combined factors were calculated from the range of singular assessments. Results Overall, 13 weeks of resistance training increased muscle strength (13% +/- 8%), muscle mass (9% +/- 8%), and endurance performance (one-legged, 23% +/- 15%; whole-body, 8% +/- 7%), assessed as weighted combined factors, and were associated with changes in health variables (e.g. visceral fat, -6% +/- 21%; [LDL](serum), -4% +/- 14%) and muscle tissue characteristics such as fibre type proportions (e.g. IIX, -3% points), myonuclei per fibre (30% +/- 65%), total RNA/rRNA abundances (15%/6-19%), and transcriptome profiles (e.g. 312 differentially expressed genes). Vitamin D-3 supplementation did not affect training-associated changes for any of the main outcome domains, despite robust increases in [25(OH)D](serum) ( increment 49% vs. placebo). No conditional effects were observed for COPD vs. healthy or pre-RCT [25(OH)D](serum). In secondary analyses, vitamin D-3 affected expression of gene sets involved in vascular functions in muscle tissue and strength gains in participants with high fat mass, which advocates further study. Conclusions Vitamin D-3 supplementation did not affect muscular responses to resistance training in older adults with or without COPD.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available