The purpose of this study is to assess whether the greater performance benefits from ingesting carbohydrate-protein supplements during endurance running, in comparison to the traditionally used carbohydrate supplement, is attributed to the extra calories contained in the carbohydrate-protein supplement or the presence of protein.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether the performance benefits from consuming a carbohydrate-protein (CHO-P) supplement, such as Accelerade, during endurance exercise, as opposed to the traditionally used carbohydrate (CHO) supplement, such as Gatorade, are attributed to the extra calories in the CHO-P supplement or the presence of protein alone in comparison to CHO supplements. Numerous studies comparing CHO and CHO-P supplements on endurance performance have found contradicting results in terms of CHO-P supplementation and performance benefits. While physiological mechanisms have been proposed as to why the CHO-P supplements elicit greater performance, research has yet to determine why some studies have found this, especially while other studies have found no performance benefits from CHO-P supplementation. This inconsistency in research may be due to the caloric difference between supplements tested; due to the addition of protein, the CHO-P supplement contains more calories per serving than the CHO supplement. As a result, this study will be comparing 4 different supplements during endurance exercise, a CHO-P supplement, CHO supplement, a double carbohydrate supplement (CHO-CHO), and a placebo (PLA). The CHO and CHO-P supplement will be matched for CHO content, whereas the CHO-P and CHO-CHO supplements will be matched for total caloric content. Participants will be asked to run four 12-mile runs on 4 separate occasions, approximately 7-10 days apart, and will be blinded to supplement content and order of supplement administration among trials. The 12-mile run will elicit an exercise bout greater than 60 minutes, which is relevant when supplementing exercise with CHO or CHO-P. Performance will be assessed via time it takes to complete both the 12-mile run and the 1.6 mile maximal effort at the end of the run.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
12
The CHO supplement will be administered during trial 1. The CHO-P will be administered during trial 2. The CHO-CHO supplement will be administered during trial 3. The PLA supplement will be administered during trial 4. This is the order of supplement administration for subjects randomly assigned to this order group.
The CHO-P supplement will be administered during trial 1. The CHO-CHO will be administered during trial 2. The PLA supplement will be administered during trial 3. The CHO supplement will be administered during trial 4. This is the order of supplement administration for subjects randomly assigned to this order group.
Health Physical Education and Recreation Building
Knoxville, Tennessee, United States
Time it takes to complete each 12-mile time trial run
Time frame: 4 days
Time it takes to complete the 1.6 mile maximal effort at the end of the 12 mile run.
Time frame: 4 days
Heart Rate at the beginning of each time trial, start of the maximal effort, end of the run.
Time frame: 4 days
Rating of perceived exertion through out the duration of the 12 mile time trial run.
Time frame: 4 days
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The CHO-CHO supplement will be administered during trial 1. The PLA will be administered during trial 2. The CHO supplement will be administered during trial 3. The CHO-P supplement will be administered during trial 4. This is the order of supplement administration for subjects randomly assigned to this order group.
The PLA supplement will be administered during trial 1. The CHO will be administered during trial 2. The CHO-P supplement will be administered during trial 3. The CHO-CHO supplement will be administered during trial 4. This is the order of supplement administration for subjects randomly assigned to this order group.