Longitudinal changes in body composition and diet after acute spinal cord injury
Journal Title
Nutrition
Publication Type
Research article
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Spinal cord injury (SCI) is associated with low muscle mass and adiposity, however, to our knowledge, few studies have monitored the trajectory of changes over time. This study aimed to evaluate the timing, rate, magnitude, and site-specific changes in body composition and related changes in diet after SCI. METHODS: We assessed 39 patients with SCI. The analysis included five women. Of the participants, 51% had American Spinal Injury Association Impairment Scale (AIS) criteria A/B (motor complete) injuries, 18% had AIS C (sensory/motor incomplete) injuries, and 31% had AIS D (motor incomplete) injuries. The mean age of the patients was 43.2 y. They were 48.1 d post-injury and had their weight, diet, and body composition (bioimpedance spectroscopy) assessed every 2 wk. RESULTS: No significant linear changes were observed for any body composition measure. Total body fat mass (FM) changed 0.01 kg/2 wk when fitted to a quadratic model (P = 0.004), decreasing to week 15 and returning to baseline at week 28. Subgroup analysis revealed that arm lean tissue mass (LTM) increased in paraplegic versus tetraplegic participants (0.05 versus -0.01 kg/2 wk, P = 0.007). Participants with AIS A/B injuries lost FM (-0.17 kg; P = 0.010), whereas those with AIS C injuries gained appendicular LTM (ALTM; 0.15 kg; P = 0.017) and leg LTM (0.12 kg; P = 0.008) every 2 wk. Body composition remained stable in the AIS D group. Mean fortnightly changes were greater in the AIS A/B group than the C group for weight (mean difference -0.30 kg; P = 0.021), FM (-0.25 kg; P = 0.002), and leg LTM (-0.11 kg; P = 0.021) and AIS A/B versus D for FM (-0.42 kg; P = 0.013). Baseline energy and protein intakes were 2150 kcal (±741) and 102 g (±40) and decreased by 21.5 kcal (P = 0.016) and 1.3 g (P = 0.004) every 2 wk but were not associated with body composition changes. CONCLUSIONS: Neurologic level and severity of SCI, but not changes in diet, were the main determinants of heterogeneous body composition changes.
Publisher
Elsevier
Keywords
Humans; Female; *Spinal Cord Injuries/complications; Obesity/complications; Body Composition/physiology; Diet; Body composition; Dietary intake; Fat mass; Fat-free mass; Lean tissue mass; Spinal cord injury
Department(s)
Allied Health
Open Access at Publisher's Site
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nut.2023.112345
Terms of Use/Rights Notice
Refer to copyright notice on published article.


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