Lambert E V, Goedecke J H, Zyle C, Murphy K, Hawley J A, Dennis S C, Noakes T D
Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine in the Department of Human Biology, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Cape Town, Sports Science Institute of South Africa, Newlands 7725, Cape Town, South Africa.
Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2001 Jun;11(2):209-25. doi: 10.1123/ijsnem.11.2.209.
We examined the effects of a high-fat diet (HFD-CHO) versus a habitual diet, prior to carbohydrate (CHO)-loading on fuel metabolism and cycling time-trial (TT) performance. Five endurance-trained cyclists participated in two 14-day randomized cross-over trials during which subjects consumed either a HFD (> 65% MJ from fat) or their habitual diet (CTL) (30 +/- 5% MJ from fat) for 10 day, before ingesting a high-CHO diet (CHO-loading, CHO > 70% MJ) for 3 days. Trials consisted of a 150-min cycle at 70% of peak oxygen uptake (VáO2peak), followed immediately by a 20-km TT. One hour before each trial, cyclists ingested 400 ml of a 3.44% medium-chain triacylglycerol (MCT) solution, and during the trial, ingested 600 ml/hour of a 10% 14C-glucose + 3.44% MCT solution. The dietary treatments did not alter the subjects' weight, body fat, or lipid profile. There were also no changes in circulating glucose, lactate, free fatty acid (FFA), and b-hydroxybutyrate concentrations during exercise. However, mean serum glycerol concentrations were significantly higher (p < .01) in the HFD-CHO trial. The HFD-CHO diet increased total fat oxidation and reduced total CHO oxidation but did not alter plasma glucose oxidation during exercise. By contrast, the estimated rates of muscle glycogen and lactate oxidation were lower after the HFD-CHO diet. The HFD-CHO treatment was also associated with improved TT times (29.5 +/- 2.9 min vs. 30.9 +/- 3.4 min for HFD-CHO and CTL-CHO, p <.05). High-fat feeding for 10 days prior to CHO-loading was associated with an increased reliance on fat, a decreased reliance on muscle glycogen, and improved time trial performance after prolonged exercise.
我们研究了在进行碳水化合物(CHO)负荷训练之前,高脂饮食(HFD-CHO)与习惯饮食对燃料代谢和自行车计时赛(TT)成绩的影响。五名耐力训练的自行车运动员参加了两项为期14天的随机交叉试验,在此期间,受试者先连续10天食用高脂饮食(脂肪提供>65%的能量)或其习惯饮食(对照,CTL,脂肪提供30±5%的能量),然后再连续3天摄入高CHO饮食(CHO负荷,CHO>70%的能量)。试验包括在峰值摄氧量(VáO2peak)的70%下进行150分钟的骑行,随后立即进行20公里的TT。每次试验前一小时,自行车运动员摄入400毫升3.44%的中链甘油三酯(MCT)溶液,试验期间,每小时摄入600毫升10%的14C-葡萄糖+3.44%的MCT溶液。饮食处理并未改变受试者的体重、体脂或血脂谱。运动期间循环葡萄糖、乳酸、游离脂肪酸(FFA)和β-羟基丁酸浓度也没有变化。然而,在HFD-CHO试验中,平均血清甘油浓度显著更高(p<.01)。HFD-CHO饮食增加了总脂肪氧化并减少了总CHO氧化,但在运动期间并未改变血浆葡萄糖氧化。相比之下,HFD-CHO饮食后肌肉糖原和乳酸氧化的估计速率较低。HFD-CHO处理还与TT时间的改善有关(HFD-CHO组为29.5±2.9分钟,CTL-CHO组为30.9±3.4分钟,p<.05)。在CHO负荷训练前10天进行高脂喂养与增加对脂肪的依赖、减少对肌肉糖原的依赖以及延长运动后的计时赛成绩改善有关。