Beetroot Juice Does Not Enhance Altitude Running Performance in Well-Trained Athletes

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Beetroot Juice Does Not Enhance Altitude Running Performance in Well-Trained Athletes. / Arnold, J.T.; Oliver, S.J.; Lewis-Jones, T.M. et al.
In: Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, 04.02.2015.

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Arnold JT, Oliver SJ, Lewis-Jones TM, Wylie LJ, Macdonald JH. Beetroot Juice Does Not Enhance Altitude Running Performance in Well-Trained Athletes. Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism. 2015 Feb 4. doi: 10.1139/apnm-2014-0470

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Arnold, J.T. ; Oliver, S.J. ; Lewis-Jones, T.M. et al. / Beetroot Juice Does Not Enhance Altitude Running Performance in Well-Trained Athletes. In: Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism. 2015.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Beetroot Juice Does Not Enhance Altitude Running Performance in Well-Trained Athletes

AU - Arnold, J.T.

AU - Oliver, S.J.

AU - Lewis-Jones, T.M.

AU - Wylie, L.J.

AU - Macdonald, J.H.

N1 - (c) NRC Research Press

PY - 2015/2/4

Y1 - 2015/2/4

N2 - We hypothesized that acute dietary nitrate (NO3-) provided as concentrated beetroot juice supplement would improve endurance running performance of well-trained runners in normobaric hypoxia. Ten male runners (mean (SD): sea level V̇O2max 66 (7) mL.kg-1.min-1, 10 km personal best 36 (2) min) completed incremental exercise to exhaustion at 4000 m and a 10 km treadmill time trial at 2500 m simulated altitude on separate days, after supplementation with ~7 mmol NO3- and a placebo, 2.5 h before exercise. Oxygen cost, arterial oxygen saturation, heart rate and ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) were determined during the incremental exercise test. Differences between treatments were determined using means [95% confidence intervals], paired sample t-tests and a probability of individual response analysis. NO3- supplementation increased plasma [nitrite] (NO3-, 473 (226) nM vs. placebo, 61 (37) nM, P <0.001) but did not alter time to exhaustion during the incremental test (NO3-, 402 (80) s vs. placebo 393 (62) s, P = 0.5) or time to complete the 10 km time trial (NO3-, 2862 (233) s vs. placebo, 2874 (265) s, P = 0.6). Further, no practically meaningful beneficial effect on time trial performance was observed as the 11 [-60 to 38] s improvement was less than the a priori determined minimum important difference (51 s), and only three runners experienced a ´likely, probable´ performance improvement. NO3- also did not alter oxygen cost, arterial oxygen saturation, heart rate or RPE. Acute dietary NO3- supplementation did not consistently enhance running performance of well-trained athletes in normobaric hypoxia.

AB - We hypothesized that acute dietary nitrate (NO3-) provided as concentrated beetroot juice supplement would improve endurance running performance of well-trained runners in normobaric hypoxia. Ten male runners (mean (SD): sea level V̇O2max 66 (7) mL.kg-1.min-1, 10 km personal best 36 (2) min) completed incremental exercise to exhaustion at 4000 m and a 10 km treadmill time trial at 2500 m simulated altitude on separate days, after supplementation with ~7 mmol NO3- and a placebo, 2.5 h before exercise. Oxygen cost, arterial oxygen saturation, heart rate and ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) were determined during the incremental exercise test. Differences between treatments were determined using means [95% confidence intervals], paired sample t-tests and a probability of individual response analysis. NO3- supplementation increased plasma [nitrite] (NO3-, 473 (226) nM vs. placebo, 61 (37) nM, P <0.001) but did not alter time to exhaustion during the incremental test (NO3-, 402 (80) s vs. placebo 393 (62) s, P = 0.5) or time to complete the 10 km time trial (NO3-, 2862 (233) s vs. placebo, 2874 (265) s, P = 0.6). Further, no practically meaningful beneficial effect on time trial performance was observed as the 11 [-60 to 38] s improvement was less than the a priori determined minimum important difference (51 s), and only three runners experienced a ´likely, probable´ performance improvement. NO3- also did not alter oxygen cost, arterial oxygen saturation, heart rate or RPE. Acute dietary NO3- supplementation did not consistently enhance running performance of well-trained athletes in normobaric hypoxia.

U2 - 10.1139/apnm-2014-0470

DO - 10.1139/apnm-2014-0470

M3 - Article

JO - Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism

JF - Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism

SN - 1715-5312

ER -