Rauch H G L, St Clair Gibson A, Lambert E V, Noakes T D
UCT/MRC Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, Sports Science Institute, Boundary Road, Newlands, Cape Town 7700, South Africa.
Br J Sports Med. 2005 Jan;39(1):34-8. doi: 10.1136/bjsm.2003.010645.
In this study we examined the pacing strategy and the end muscle glycogen contents in eight cyclists, once when they were carbohydrate loaded and once when they were non-loaded.
Cyclists completed 2 hours of cycling at approximately 73% of maximum oxygen consumption, which included five sprints at 100% of peak sustained power output every 20 minutes, followed immediately by a 1 hour time trial. Muscle biopsies were performed before and immediately after exercise, while blood samples were taken during the 2 hour steady state rides and immediately after exercise.
Carbohydrate loading improved mean power output during the 1 hour time trial (mean (SEM) 219 (17) v 233 (15) W; p<0.05) and enabled subjects to use significantly more muscle glycogen than during the trial following their normal diet. Significantly, the subjects, kept blind to all feedback except for time, started both time trials at similar workloads ( approximately 30 W), but after 1 minute of cycling, the workload average 14 W higher throughout the loaded compared with the non-loaded time trial. There were no differences in subjects' plasma glucose and lactate concentrations and heart rates in the carbohydrate loaded versus the non-loaded trial. Of the eight subjects, seven improved their time trial performance after carbohydrate loading. Finishing muscle glycogen concentrations in these seven subjects were remarkably similar in both trials (18 (3) v 20 (3) mmol/kg w/w), despite significantly different starting values and time trial performances (36.55 (1.47) v 38.14 (1.27) km/h; p<0.05). The intra-subject coefficient of variation (CV) for end glycogen content in these seven subjects was 10%, compared with an inter-subject CV of 43%.
As seven subjects completed the time trials with the same end exercise muscle glycogen concentrations, diet induced changes in pacing strategies during the time trials in these subjects may have resulted from integrated feedback from the periphery, perhaps from glycogen content in exercising muscles.
在本研究中,我们对八名自行车运动员在碳水化合物负荷状态和非负荷状态下的骑行策略以及运动结束时肌肉糖原含量进行了检测。
自行车运动员以约最大摄氧量的73%完成2小时的骑行,其中包括每20分钟进行一次持续100%峰值功率输出的冲刺,随后立即进行1小时的计时赛。在运动前和运动后立即进行肌肉活检,同时在2小时的稳定骑行过程中和运动后立即采集血样。
碳水化合物负荷提高了1小时计时赛期间的平均功率输出(平均值(标准误)219(17)对233(15)瓦;p<0.05),并使受试者在试验中比正常饮食后使用了显著更多的肌肉糖原。值得注意的是,除时间外对所有反馈均不知情的受试者在两次计时赛开始时的工作量相似(约30瓦),但骑行1分钟后,与非负荷计时赛相比,负荷状态下的整个过程工作量平均高14瓦。在碳水化合物负荷试验和非负荷试验中,受试者的血浆葡萄糖、乳酸浓度和心率没有差异。八名受试者中有七名在碳水化合物负荷后计时赛成绩有所提高。尽管起始值和计时赛成绩有显著差异(36.55(1.47)对38.14(1.27)千米/小时;p<0.05),但这七名受试者在两次试验中运动结束时的肌肉糖原浓度非常相似(18(3)对20(3)毫摩尔/千克湿重)。这七名受试者运动结束时糖原含量的受试者内变异系数(CV)为10%,而受试者间CV为43%。
由于七名受试者在计时赛结束时运动肌肉糖原浓度相同,饮食引起的这些受试者在计时赛期间骑行策略的变化可能源于外周的综合反馈,可能来自运动肌肉中的糖原含量。