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Nutrition and Physical Activity during British Army Officer Cadet Training: Part 1 - Energy Balance and Energy Availability

Authors :
Victoria C. Edwards
Stephen D. Myers
Sophie L. Wardle
Andrew G. Siddall
Steven D. Powell
Sarah Needham-Beck
Sarah S. Kefyalew
Priya A. Singh
Elise R. Orford
Michelle C. Venables
Sarah Jackson
Julie P. Greeves
Sam D. Blacker
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Human Kinetics, 2022.

Abstract

Military training is characterized by high daily energy expenditures which are difficult to match with energy intake, potentially resulting in negative energy balance (EB) and low energy availability (EA). The aim of this study was to quantify EB and EA during British Army Officer Cadet training. Thirteen (seven women) Officer Cadets (mean ± SD: age 24 ± 3 years) volunteered to participate. EB and EA were estimated from energy intake (weighing of food and food diaries) and energy expenditure (doubly labeled water) measured in three periods of training: 9 days on-camp (CAMP), a 5-day field exercise (FEX), and a 9-day mixture of both CAMP and field-based training (MIX). Variables were compared by condition and gender with a repeated-measures analysis of variance. Negative EB was greatest during FEX (−2,197 ± 455 kcal/day) compared with CAMP (−692 ± 506 kcal/day; p p −1·day−1) compared with FEX (1 ± 16 kcal·kg FFM−1·day−1; p = .002) and MIX (10 ± 7 kcal·kg FFM−1·day−1; p = .003), with no apparent difference between FEX and MIX (p = .071). Irrespective of condition, there were no apparent differences between gender in EB (p = .375) or EA (p = .385). These data can be used to inform evidenced-based strategies to manage EA and EB during military training, and enhance the health and performance of military personnel.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1526484X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b19b190c5a19943d592863f3014af44