Guest guest Posted June 15, 2007 Report Share Posted June 15, 2007 Members may enjoy reading the following: Betaine, Hyperventilation, Hyperimmune Egg Protein and Other Novelties for Performance at the 2007 ACSM Annual Meeting Will G Hopkins Sportscience 11, 1-8, 2007 (sportsci.org/2007/wghACSM.htm) Acute Strategies http://sportsci.org/2007/wghACSM.htm Nutrition The most exciting presentation of the conference for me was on the performance-enhancing effects of betaine from a group at Bill Kraemer's lab. Few delegates saw the presentation, because it was mis-programmed into a session on hydration rather than ergogenic aids or supplements, and it came right at the end of the last slide session on the last day in the most remote lecture theater of the conference center. Betaine, which I had never heard of, turns out to be a derivative of the amino acid glycine. Plants make and use it apparently to resist dehydration, but in animals it is involved in the synthesis of creatine. The subjects in the double-blind crossover study were 12 men with at least 3 months experience of resistance training. They did one standardized resistance-training session a week to maintain fitness during the supplementation and washout periods, and performance testing was a high-intensity exercise challenge spread over 2 d to test the ability of betaine to maintain performance. After 14 d of supplementation (1.25 g, twice a day), bench-throw power increased by 16% and isometric bench-press force increased by 28% compared with placebo. Other measures of performance did not show " significant " changes. In question time I asked how they thought it might work, but all he could say was that it appears to used up during exercise–plasma levels fell–which might explain why it didn't work clearly for the strength-endurance measures that were assessed towards the end of the challenge. Compared with a 6% carbohydrate drink alone, addition of 1.2% milk- protein hydrolysate produced a 35% increase in time to exhaustion at 80% VO2max in 10 cyclists and runners, following an 8-km run and a 50- km cycle at 80% and 70% of VO2max [904]. Doubling the protein reduced the benefit to only 9%. It's too difficult to work out the effect in terms of mean power output in a time trial, but it's probably something like 1-2% for the lower dose of protein and negligible for the higher dose. In a blind crossover of 6 male and 6 female high-level swimmers, a 4:1 carbohydrate-protein supplement in gel form (80+20 g in total) consumed with 500 ml of water immediately before and during 24 100-yd sprints produced a gain in swimming speed of ~3% that was apparent by the fourth sprint and was sustained thereafter [2061]. To convert percent change in swimming speed or time to percent change in power output, I've figured out from data in a paper by Toussaint and Hollander (1994) that you have to multiply by a factor of 2. So the equivalent gain in power output is a phenomenal ~6%! The same supplement in drink form produced a 2.3% enhancement in overall performance time in four 2-km sprints (with 30- to 60-min recoveries) on a cycle ergometer in a blind crossover with 17 aerobically trained subjects [2063]. Again, depending on the ergometer, the gain corresponds to ~5-6% in mean power. I chatted with the principal investigator, Seifert, who told me that carbohydrate alone was less effective than carbohydrate plus protein in a subsequent study with the swimmers…But drinks containing carbohydrate plus protein or carbohydrate alone had little effect on performance and markers of muscle damage following unaccustomed eccentric exercise (30 min of downhill running) in a randomized blind trial of 18 females [2065]…. Caffeine continued to be beneficial at the endurance end of the performance spectrum or for brief bouts affected by fatigue [698-701, 903, 954], as well as for tennis skill [953]. It helped 15 college- age males do more reps with less pain than placebo or aspirin in a resistance-training session, but not without side effects (restlessness, tremor, stomach distress) [1586]. Caffeine may work by reducing muscle pain during exercise, at least in 16 college females, and it reduced pain more in those with less anxiety sensitivity [1217]. Low doses of caffeine (2-3 mg per kg of body mass] with 13 male cyclists could be as effective as the more usual doses (~6 mg.kg?1) in their abstract [701], but the authors reached a different and wrong conclusion in the podium presentation after " protecting the p value " . Ever tried desecrating the p value? It's liberating. Beta-alanine taken as a supplement gets converted in muscle to carnosine, a dipeptide that acts probably as buffer for acidity in intense exercise. It's best to take it many times a day for at least 4 wk [910]. In randomized blind controlled trials, 6+6 elite cyclists got enhancements in time to exhaustion and isokinetic work [2069–the data aren't in the abstract and I forgot to get them off the poster], and 11+11 nondescript women got gains in endurance performance tests that I can't convert to mean power [2072]. I chatted with the leading researcher in this field, , and we worked out that gains in mean power in time trials would be of the order of a few percent. Other anti-oxidants featured in several presentations. A 28-wk course of capsules containing powdered fruit and vegetable juice produced lower resting protein carbonyls (a measure of oxidative stress–presumably bad) and TNF-a (a measure of immune activation–good or bad?) in the blood compared with a placebo in a crossover study of 40 trained men in a special-forces group [1224]. But there was apparently little effect of or effect on a ride to exhaustion at 70% of VO2max. On the other hand, protein carbonyls did rise following exercise and the concentration was higher at rest and in exercise when the 12 trained males exercised and recovered with a drink containing carbohydrate, protein, vitamin C and vitamin E than when the drink contained only carbohydrate [1225]. So, no evidence at this conference for benefits of anti-oxidants on performance. Not surprisingly, 9 elite swimmers improved their 200-m freestyle time by 1.6% when they consumed sodium bicarbonate instead of a placebo [1462]…. =============== Carruthers Wakefield, UK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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