One purpose of the present study was to evaluate the effect of elevating serum bicarbonate concentration more than had been achieved in previous studies without inducing potentially ergolytic GI distress. In order to do so, a modified SB ingestion protocol (ModSB) of 4 progressively larger doses (110 mg·kg-1 - 200 mg·kg-1) was administered. It was hypothesized that ModSB would significantly elevate serum bicarbonate concentration to a greater extent than would an acute SB ingestion protocol (AcuteSB). This study was also designed to corroborate the results of previous studies regarding the ergogenic effects of sodium bicarbonate ingestion. Most studies have administered sodium bicarbonate in solutions, which would make the participants aware of the substance ingested due to the distinctive flavor of SB, possibly inducing a placebo effect. All doses in the present study were administered in gelatin capsules to mask the flavor of the ingested substances, maintaining participant blindness to the procedure. Blood samples were collected at baseline and following placebo (CaCO3), acute sodium bicarbonate ingestion, and modified sodium bicarbonate ingestion to determine the effects of the ingestion protocols on serum bicarbonate, sodium and lactate concentrations, as well as on serum pH and blood hematocrit. The study design was a randomized double-blind crossover.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
10
4 progressively larger doses (110 mg·kg-1 - 200 mg·kg-1) of sodium bicarbonate
3 progressively larger doses of calcium carbonate followed by one acute dose of sodium bicarbonate (300 mg/kg)
4 progressively larger doses (110 mg·kg-1 - 200 mg·kg-1) of calcium carbonate
Concentration of serum sodium bicarbonate (mmol·L-1)
Blood was drawn via venipuncture and allowed to coagulate at room temperature for 25 minutes and then spun in a refrigerated centrifuge for 10 minutes. The serum was pipetted into three small vials. One vial was tested for bicarbonate concentration in duplicate with a carbon dioxide liquid stable reagent method (TR28321, Thermo Electron Corporation, Waltham, MA) using a spectrophotometer (Lambda 20, PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA).
Time frame: 24 hours
Concentration of serum sodium (mmol·L-1)
Blood was drawn via venipuncture and allowed to coagulate at room temperature for 25 minutes and then spun in a refrigerated centrifuge for 10 minutes. The serum was pipetted into three small vials. One vial was analyzed for sodium concentration (Vitros DT60 II, Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics, Rochester, NY)
Time frame: 24 hours
pH
The serum in one vial was immediately analyzed for pH using the Orion 720A+ (Thermo Electron Corporation, Waltham, MA)
Time frame: 24 hours
Blood hematocrit (%)
Blood was drawn via venipuncture. Two capillary tubes were immediately filled from the blood samples to be tested for hematocrit via the microhematocrit method.
Time frame: 24 hours
Likert scale for self-reported gastrointestinal distress (1-10)
Gastrointestinal distress was assessed via self-report on a Likert scale of 1-10.
Time frame: 24 hours
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