scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Physiological and cognitive responses to caffeine during repeated, high-intensity exercise

TLDR
Caffeine had no ergogenic effect on repeated, maximal cycling bouts and may be detrimental to anaerobic performance, and there were no positive effects on cognitive or blood parameters except a significant decrease in plasma potassium concentrations at rest.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of caffeine on repeated, anaerobic exercise using a double-blind, randomized, crossover design. Seventeen subjects (five female) underwent cognitive (reaction time, number recall) and blood (glucose, potassium, catecholamines, lactate) testing before and after consuming caffeine (6 mg/kg), placebo, or nothing (control). An exercise test (two 60 s maximal cycling bouts) was conducted 90 min after caffeine/placebo consumption. Plasma caffeine concentrations significantly increased after caffeine ingestion, however, there were no positive effects on cognitive or blood parameters except a significant decrease in plasma potassium concentrations at rest. Potentially negative effects of caffeine included significantly higher blood lactate compared to control and significantly slower time to peak power in exercise bout 2 compared to control and placebo. Caffeine had no significant effect on peak power, work output, RPE, or peak heart rate. In conclusion, caffeine had no ergogenic effect on repeated, maximal cycling bouts and may be detrimental to anaerobic performance.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

American College of Sports Medicine position stand. Nutrition and athletic performance.

TL;DR: This updated position paper couples a rigorous, systematic, evidence-based analysis of nutrition and performance-specific literature with current scientific data related to energy needs, assessment of body composition, strategies for weight change, nutrient and fluid needs, special nutrient needs during training and competition, the use of supplements and ergogenic aids, nutrition recommendations for vegetarian athletes, and the roles and responsibilities of the sports dietitian.
Journal ArticleDOI

Position of the American Dietetic Association, Dietitians of Canada, and the American College of Sports Medicine: Nutrition and athletic performance.

TL;DR: This position paper reviews the current scientific data related to the energy needs of athletes, assessment of body composition, strategies for weight change, the nutrient and fluid needs of Athletes, special nutrient needs during training, the use of supplements and nutritional ergogenic aids, and the nutrition recommendations for vegetarian athletes.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of caffeine's effects on cognitive, physical and occupational performance.

TL;DR: Repeated administration of caffeine is an effective strategy to maintain physical and cognitive capabilities, since most real-world activities require complex decision making, motor processing and movement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Caffeine and anaerobic performance: ergogenic value and mechanisms of action.

TL;DR: Recent studies incorporating trained subjects and paradigms specific to intermittent sports activity support the notion that caffeine is ergogenic to an extent with anaerobic exercise, and suggest that caffeine stimulates the CNS, which could potentially have favourable effects on negating decreased firing rates of motor units and possibly produce a more sustainable and forceful muscle contraction.
References
More filters
Journal Article

Actions of Caffeine in the Brain with Special Reference to Factors That Contribute to Its Widespread Use

TL;DR: Caffeine is the most widely consumed behaviorally active substance in the world and almost all caffeine comes from dietary sources (beverages and food).
Book

Statistics In Kinesiology

TL;DR: The T test as discussed by the authors compares means from two sets of data simple analysis of variance with repeated measures advanced statistical procedures (factorial ANOVA, ANCOVA, MANOVA) analysis of nonparametric data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Caffeine and exercise: metabolism, endurance and performance

TL;DR: The limited information available suggests that caffeine non-users and users respond similarly and that withdrawal from caffeine may not be important, and caffeine may act synergistically with other drugs including ephedrine and anti-inflammatory agents.
Journal Article

Effects of caffeine ingestion on metabolism and exercise performance.

TL;DR: The enhanced endurance performance observed in the C Trial was likely the combined effects of caffeine on lipolysis and its positive influence on nerve impulse transmission.
Journal ArticleDOI

Metabolic, catecholamine, and exercise performance responses to various doses of caffeine

TL;DR: The results are not compatible with the traditional theory that caffeine mediates its ergogenic effect via enhanced catecholamines, and only the highest dose of caffeine resulted in increases in glycerol and free fatty acids.
Related Papers (5)