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No effect of glutamine supplementation and hyperoxia on oxidative metabolism and performance during high-intensity exercise.
J Sports Sci. 2008 Aug; 26(10):1081-90.JS

Abstract

Glutamine enhances the exercise-induced expansion of the tricarboxylic acid intermediate pool. The aim of the present study was to determine whether oral glutamine, alone or in combination with hyperoxia, influenced oxidative metabolism and cycle time-trial performance. Eight participants consumed either placebo or 0.125 g kg body mass(-1) of glutamine in 5 ml kg body mass(-1) placebo 1 h before exercise in normoxic (control and glutamine respectively) or hyperoxic (FiO(2) = 50%; hyperoxia and hyperoxia + glutamine respectively) conditions. Participants then cycled for 6 min at 70% maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2max)) immediately before completing a brief high-intensity time-trial (approximately 4 min) during which a pre-determined volume of work was completed as fast as possible. The increment in pulmonary oxygen uptake during the performance test (DeltaVO(2max), P = 0.02) and exercise performance (control: 243 s, s(x) = 7; glutamine: 242 s, s(x) = 3; hyperoxia: 231 s, s(x) = 3; hyperoxia + glutamine: 228 s, s(x) = 5; P < 0.01) were significantly improved in hyperoxic conditions. There was some evidence that glutamine ingestion increased DeltaVO(2max) in normoxia, but not hyperoxia (interaction drink/FiO(2), P = 0.04), but there was no main effect or impact on performance. Overall, the data show no effect of glutamine ingestion either alone or in combination with hyperoxia, and thus no limiting effect of the tricarboxylic acid intermediate pool size, on oxidative metabolism and performance during maximal exercise.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Health and Biology, Liverpool Hope University, Liverpool, UK. marwoods@hope.ac.ukNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Comparative Study
Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18608833

Citation

Marwood, Simon, and Jo Bowtell. "No Effect of Glutamine Supplementation and Hyperoxia On Oxidative Metabolism and Performance During High-intensity Exercise." Journal of Sports Sciences, vol. 26, no. 10, 2008, pp. 1081-90.
Marwood S, Bowtell J. No effect of glutamine supplementation and hyperoxia on oxidative metabolism and performance during high-intensity exercise. J Sports Sci. 2008;26(10):1081-90.
Marwood, S., & Bowtell, J. (2008). No effect of glutamine supplementation and hyperoxia on oxidative metabolism and performance during high-intensity exercise. Journal of Sports Sciences, 26(10), 1081-90. https://doi.org/10.1080/02640410801930200
Marwood S, Bowtell J. No Effect of Glutamine Supplementation and Hyperoxia On Oxidative Metabolism and Performance During High-intensity Exercise. J Sports Sci. 2008;26(10):1081-90. PubMed PMID: 18608833.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - No effect of glutamine supplementation and hyperoxia on oxidative metabolism and performance during high-intensity exercise. AU - Marwood,Simon, AU - Bowtell,Jo, PY - 2008/7/9/pubmed PY - 2009/1/15/medline PY - 2008/7/9/entrez SP - 1081 EP - 90 JF - Journal of sports sciences JO - J Sports Sci VL - 26 IS - 10 N2 - Glutamine enhances the exercise-induced expansion of the tricarboxylic acid intermediate pool. The aim of the present study was to determine whether oral glutamine, alone or in combination with hyperoxia, influenced oxidative metabolism and cycle time-trial performance. Eight participants consumed either placebo or 0.125 g kg body mass(-1) of glutamine in 5 ml kg body mass(-1) placebo 1 h before exercise in normoxic (control and glutamine respectively) or hyperoxic (FiO(2) = 50%; hyperoxia and hyperoxia + glutamine respectively) conditions. Participants then cycled for 6 min at 70% maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2max)) immediately before completing a brief high-intensity time-trial (approximately 4 min) during which a pre-determined volume of work was completed as fast as possible. The increment in pulmonary oxygen uptake during the performance test (DeltaVO(2max), P = 0.02) and exercise performance (control: 243 s, s(x) = 7; glutamine: 242 s, s(x) = 3; hyperoxia: 231 s, s(x) = 3; hyperoxia + glutamine: 228 s, s(x) = 5; P < 0.01) were significantly improved in hyperoxic conditions. There was some evidence that glutamine ingestion increased DeltaVO(2max) in normoxia, but not hyperoxia (interaction drink/FiO(2), P = 0.04), but there was no main effect or impact on performance. Overall, the data show no effect of glutamine ingestion either alone or in combination with hyperoxia, and thus no limiting effect of the tricarboxylic acid intermediate pool size, on oxidative metabolism and performance during maximal exercise. SN - 0264-0414 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18608833/No_effect_of_glutamine_supplementation_and_hyperoxia_on_oxidative_metabolism_and_performance_during_high_intensity_exercise_ L2 - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/02640410801930200 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -