4.0 Article

Performance nutrition for cold-weather military operations

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Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/22423982.2023.2192392

Keywords

Energy balance; energy expenditure; protein balance; physical performance; military

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High energy expenditure without increased energy intake leads to severe energy deficits during cold-weather military operations. These deficits are associated with negative physiological effects and decreased physical performance. Increasing energy density through higher dietary fat intake may be an effective nutritional intervention to reduce energy deficits and mitigate the negative effects.
.High daily energy expenditure without compensatory increases in energy intake results in severe energy deficits during cold-weather military operations. The severity of energy deficits has been proportionally linked to declines in body mass, negative protein balance, suppression of androgen hormones, increases in systemic inflammation and degraded physical performance. Food availability does not appear to be the predominant factor causing energy deficits; providing additional rations or supplement snack bars does not reduce the severity of the energy deficits. Nutrition interventions that allow greater energy intake could be effective for reducing energy deficits during cold-weather military operations. One potential intervention is to increase energy density (i.e. energy per unit mass of food) by increasing dietary fat. Our laboratory recently reported that self-selected higher energy intakes and reductions in energy deficits were primarily driven by fat intake (r = 0.891, r(2) = 0.475), which, of the three macronutrients. Further, soldiers who ate more fat lost less body mass, had lower inflammation, and maintained net protein balance compared to those who ate less fat. These data suggest that consuming high-fat energy-dense foods may be a viable nutritional intervention that mitigates the negative physiological effects of energy deficit and sustains physical performance during cold-weather military operations.

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