PlanHab: Planetary Habitat Simulation: Nutrition Studies

Sponsor
University of Nottingham (Other)
Overall Status
Completed
CT.gov ID
NCT02293772
Collaborator
Jozef Stefan Institute (Other), KTH Royal Institute of Technology (Other), European Commission (Other)
14
3
31

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

A loss of body weight has been documented in lowland-living individuals when exposed to hypoxic environments, such as at high altitude, or under laboratory conditions. A reduction in appetite and energy intake has also been reported during conditions of microgravity, such as during space flight. Fourteen normal or over-weight men, who are otherwise healthy, will undergo 3x 21-day interventions; normobaric normoxic bed rest (NBR; FiO2=21%), normobaric hypoxic ambulatory confinement (HAMB; FiO2=14%; ~4000 m simulated altitude), and normobaric hypoxic bed rest (HBR; FiO2=14%). The effects of hypoxia and bedrest on appetite and its hormonal control will be assessed before and at day 17 of each intervention using a mixed meal tolerance test.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Other: Hypoxic ambulatory
  • Other: Hypoxic Bedrest
  • Other: Normoxic Bedrest
N/A

Detailed Description

A loss of body weight has been documented in lowland-living individuals when exposed to hypoxic environments, such as at high altitudes, or under laboratory conditions. This weight loss has been attributed both to a reduced appetite (and subsequent fall in dietary energy intake), and to an increase in resting energy expenditure. Interestingly, a reduction in appetite and energy intake has also been reported during space flight, although the mechanism for this has not been explained. As the gas inside future planetary habitats is likely to have lower partial pressure of oxygen than in Earth's atmospheric air, hypoxia induced appetite reduction could pose a challenge for individuals in these environments. For example, persistent under-eating could compromise long term health due to inadequate intake of essential micronutrients, especially in the presence of altered nutrient metabolism and requirements seen during space flight. Moreover, inadequate macronutrient intake could exacerbate the loss of lean body tissue which occurs in situations (such as microgravity, inactivity and bed rest) where muscles are unloaded. Indeed, a protein intake greater than normal could be required in situations where there is muscle inactivity, to achieve the same postprandial anabolic effect of amino acids seen in ambulatory individuals.

The mechanism for the reduction in appetite observed in hypoxia is not well established. Several incretin hormones and adipokines have been implicated in the control of appetite and may be candidates for inducing this alteration in appetite observed in hypoxia. However, reports in the literature present contradictory findings, perhaps due to the use of different experimental paradigms (hypobaric and normobaric hypoxia, active and resting subjects, variability in the degree and duration of hypoxia).

The protocol of the current study standardises physical activity, ambient temperature, hypoxic stimulus and nutritional composition of the diet, and aims to extend our knowledge of the effects of hypoxia and bedrest on appetite and its hormonal control.

In order to discern the separate and combined effects of microgravity and hypoxia, fourteen normal or over-weight men, who are otherwise healthy, will be recruited following medical and psychological screening. They will be invited to attend the Olympic Sport Centre, Planica, Slovenia on 3 occasions, with each visit being 31 days in duration and separated by 5 months. Each 31-day visit ('campaign') includes a baseline recording period (5 days), 21 days of intervention and a recovery period (5 days), with the 3 interventions allocated in a randomized, cross over design: i) Normobaric normoxic bed rest (NBR; FiO2=21%), ii) Normobaric hypoxic ambulatory confinement (HAMB; FiO2=14%; ~4000 m simulated altitude), and

  1. Normobaric hypoxic bed rest (HBR; FiO2=14%). A standardized, repeating, 14-day dietary menu, comprised of foods commonly consumed in the Slovenian diet, will be applied during all campaigns, the targeted energy intakes being calculated individually using a modified Benedict-Harris formula with physical activity factor multipliers of 1.2 for the HBR and NBR campaigns and 1.4 for the HAMB campaign. Food will be provided in weighed portions and subjects will be encouraged to eat all food supplied. However, any food not eaten will be weighed and actual amount consumed recorded in a diet analysis programme. Body mass will be assessed daily during the campaigns using a gurney incorporating load cells, and whole body composition will be determined before and immediately after each intervention using fan beam dual-emission X-ray absorptiometry.

Participants will undergo a mixed meal tolerance test before and on day 17 of each intervention period, in the morning, after a 12 hour fast, with the time of assessment replicated on each study day at every campaign. On arrival, participants will rest supine on a hospital bed and place their hand in a heated hand warming unit (air temperature 50-55oC). An intravenous cannula will then be inserted retrograde into a dorsal hand vein for arterialised-venous blood sampling. After 15mins rest, a baseline, fasting blood sample will be taken for determination of serum insulin, total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, adiponectin and leptin, whole blood glucose and lactate, and plasma catecholamines, ghrelin, PeptideYY (PYY), glucagon-like peptide-1(GLP-1), triglycerides, and non-esterified fatty acid concentration. An expired breath sample will be collected into evacuated tubes for 13 labelled carbon dioxide (13CO2) determination, and a 20min baseline measurement of resting energy expenditure (REE) and respiratory exchange ratio (RER) will be then made using indirect calorimetry, with subjects wearing a mask, and both inspired and expired air being measured on every breath. Appetite assessment will be made by asking subjects to rate their hunger, desire to eat, fullness, and their prospective food intake, by placing a vertical mark on a 0-100mm linear scale. This visual analogue scale will be measured from left to right, with 0 indicating no experience of the variable (e.g. not hungry, unable to eat anything) and 100 indicating the most of each variable that they can imagine experiencing (e.g. intense desire to eat, or completely full). Values for these 4 variables will be combined to calculate a combined appetite score (CAS). Once baseline measurements have been completed, subjects will consume a mixed nutrient milkshake (Ensure Plus, Abbott Nutrition) at 5ml/kg body weight, which will be supplemented (at 1% of carbohydrate content) with 13-Carbon labelled (13C) Glucose. Arterialised venous blood samples will subsequently be taken every 10min for glucose and lactate assessment, and every 20min for assessment of serum insulin and incretin hormones. A measurement of REE and RER will be performed in the last 15min of every 30min period for the following 2 hours to assess fuel oxidation and metabolic rate, and an expired breath sample will be collected into evacuated tubes for 13CO2 determination at a later date. Subjective appetite will be assessed every 15minutes throughout using visual analogue scales, as described above, and at the end of the 2hr postprandial period subjects will be given an ad libitum pasta-based test meal and will be instructed to eat until they feel comfortably full. This meal will be comprised of cooked dried white pasta, commercially available tomato-based pasta sauce, olive oil and grated hard cheese, with a composition of 37% of total energy derived from fat, 48% carbohydrate, and 16% protein. The amount eaten will be recorded and related to subjective appetite ratings.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Actual Enrollment :
14 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Crossover Assignment
Masking:
None (Open Label)
Primary Purpose:
Basic Science
Official Title:
Planetary Habitat Simulation: An Investigation Into the Effects of Hypoxia and / or Bedrest on Fuel Metabolism and Appetite (WP5)
Study Start Date :
Mar 1, 2012
Actual Primary Completion Date :
Nov 1, 2013
Actual Study Completion Date :
Oct 1, 2014

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Active Comparator: Hypoxic ambulatory

Ambulatory in normobaric hypoxia

Other: Hypoxic ambulatory
21 days confinement in normobaric hypoxic (FiO2 = 14%) environment

Experimental: Hypoxic Bedrest

Bedrest in normobaric hypoxia

Other: Hypoxic Bedrest
21 days supine bedrest in normobaric hypoxic (FiO2 = 14%) environment

Active Comparator: Normoxic bedrest

Bedrest in normobaric normoxia

Other: Normoxic Bedrest
21 days supine bedrest in normobaric normoxic (FiO2 = 21%) environment

Outcome Measures

Primary Outcome Measures

  1. Postprandial whole blood glucose concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 10mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

Secondary Outcome Measures

  1. Postprandial serum insulin concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  2. Postprandial serum C-Peptide concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  3. Fasting serum leptin concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  4. Fasting serum adiponectin concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  5. Fasting serum total cholesterol concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  6. Fasting serum LDL cholesterol concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  7. Fasting serum HDL cholesterol concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  8. Fasting plasmaTriacylglycerol concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  9. Fasting plasma non-esterified fatty acids concentration [early morning fasted sample]

    Early morning fasted sample taken before and on day 17 of intervention

  10. Postprandial plasma peptide YY concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  11. Postprandial plasma Ghrelin concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  12. Postprandial plasma GLP-1 concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  13. Postprandial plasma catecholamine concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 20mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  14. Postprandial whole blood lactate concentration [2hrs]

    a fasted sample and a sample taken every 10mins for 2hrs following eating, before and after 17days of intervention

  15. postprandial fuel oxidation [2hrs]

    A fasted measurement of respiratory exchange ratio and measures between 15-30, 45-60min, 75-90min and 105-120min after eating, before and on day 17 of intervention

  16. postprandial resting energy expenditure [2hrs]

    A fasted measurement of resting energy expenditure and measures between 15-30, 45-60min, 75-90min and 105-120min after eating, before and on day 17 of intervention

  17. postprandial subjective appetite [2hrs]

    A fasted measurement of combined appetite score (measured using visual analogue scales), followed by assessment every 30min for 2hrs after eating, before and on day 17 of intervention.

  18. postprandial expired 13CO2 [2hrs]

    Collection of breath samples when fasted and every 30min for 2hrs after eating, before and on day 17 of intervention.

Eligibility Criteria

Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study:
25 Years to 45 Years
Sexes Eligible for Study:
Male
Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
Yes
Inclusion Criteria:
  • Physically and mentally healthy subjects

  • Body mass index < 25 kg/m2

  • Height 158 - 190 cm

  • Waist circumference < 94 cm

  • Volunteers that are able to declare their willingness to participate in the entire study

  • Willing to be assigned randomly to the three groups

  • Successfully passing the psychological and medical screening

  • competent to sign informed consent

  • Slovenian social insurance

  • English language fluency

Exclusion Criteria:
  • Medication required that may interfere with the interpretation of the results

  • Bone mineral density (as measured by DEXA) more than 1.5 standard deviations < t score

  • Recent sub-standard nutritional status

  • Family history of thrombosis or positive response in thrombosis screening procedure.

(Biochemical analysis of the following parameters: ATIII, High sensitive C-reactive protein, S-Akt., Factor V-Leiden, Prothrombin, Lupus-partial thromboplastin time, Factor II)

  • History of: thyroid dysfunction, renal stones, diabetes, allergies, hypertension, hypocalcemia, uric acidaemia, lipidaemia, or hyperhomocysteinaemia

  • Gastro-esophageal reflux disease or renal function disorder, Hiatus hernia

  • History of medical illness

  • Smoker within six months prior to the start of the study

  • Abuse of drugs, medicine or alcohol

  • Participation in another study up to two months before study onset

  • No signed consent form before the onset of the experiment

  • Blood donors in the past three months before the onset of the experiment

  • Vegetarian and Vegans

  • Migraines

  • History of orthostatic intolerance

  • History of vestibular disorders

  • Claustrophobia

  • metallic implants, osteosynthesis material

  • Chronic back pain

Contacts and Locations

Locations

No locations specified.

Sponsors and Collaborators

  • University of Nottingham
  • Jozef Stefan Institute
  • KTH Royal Institute of Technology
  • European Commission

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: Igor Mekjavic, PhD, Jozef Stefan Institute

Study Documents (Full-Text)

None provided.

More Information

Publications

None provided.
Responsible Party:
Elizabeth Simpson, Senior Research Fellow, University of Nottingham
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
NCT02293772
Other Study ID Numbers:
  • 284438/WP5
First Posted:
Nov 18, 2014
Last Update Posted:
Mar 15, 2019
Last Verified:
Mar 1, 2019
Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
No
Plan to Share IPD:
No
Keywords provided by Elizabeth Simpson, Senior Research Fellow, University of Nottingham
Additional relevant MeSH terms:

Study Results

No Results Posted as of Mar 15, 2019