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Intermittent versus continuous enteral nutrition attenuates increases in insulin and leptin during short-term bed rest.

Javier Thomas GonzalezMarlou L DirksAndrew M HolwerdaImre W K KouwLuc J C van Loon
Published in: European journal of applied physiology (2020)
Intermittent enteral nutrition attenuates the progressive rise in plasma leptin and insulinemia seen with continuous feeding during bed rest, suggesting that continuous feeding increases insulin requirements to maintain euglycemia. This raises the possibility that hepatic insulin sensitivity is impaired to a greater extent with continuous versus intermittent feeding during bed rest. To attenuate endocrine and metabolic changes with enteral feeding, an intermittent feeding strategy may, therefore, be preferable to continuous provision of nutrition. This trial was registered on clinicaltrials.gov as NCT02521025.
Keyphrases
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