Centre of Sports and Exercise Sciences, University of Malaya , Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia.
Department of Sports Sciences, Faculty of Applied Sciences, Tunku Abdul Rahman University College , Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2018 Oct 1;125(4):1021-1029. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00221.2018. Epub 2018 Jul 5.
Both the quantity and quality of pre-exercise carbohydrate (CHO) meals have been shown to improve endurance performance. However, their role in attenuating central fatigue (CF) is inconclusive. The use of neurophysiological techniques, such as voluntary activation (VA) and the central activation ratio (CAR), alongside maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) and sustained MVC (sMVC) can provide information on CF. Hence, the objective of this study was to investigate the effects of isocaloric pre-exercise meals: 1) a high versus low quantity of CHO and 2) a high quantity of CHO with a high versus low glycemic index (GI) on MVC, VA, and CAR following a 90-min run. The high and low quantity of CHO was 1.5 and 0.8 g/kg body wt, respectively, and high and low GI was ~75 and ~40, respectively. Blood insulin, serotonin, tryptophan, and gaseous exchange were also measured. High CHO preserved sMVC, VA, CAR, and serotonin postrunning with greater CHO oxidation and insulin response, whereas in low CHO, greater reductions in sMVC, VA, and CAR were accompanied by higher serotonin and fat oxidation with lower insulin response. These observations indicate central involvements. Meanwhile, high GI CHO better preserved force (sMVC), CAR, and tryptophan with greater CHO oxidation and insulin response compared with low GI. The findings of this study suggest that pre-exercise meals with varying quantity and quality of CHO can have an effect on CF, where greater CHO oxidation and insulin response found in both high CHO and high GI lead to attenuation of CF. NEW & NOTEWORTHY This paper examined the effects of carbohydrate interventions (high and low: quantity and quality wise) on central activity during prolonged exercise using mainly neurophysiological techniques along with gaseous exchange and blood insulin, serotonin, and tryptophan data.
运动前碳水化合物(CHO)的摄入量和质量都已被证明可以提高耐力表现。然而,它们在减轻中枢疲劳(CF)方面的作用尚无定论。使用神经生理技术,如自愿激活(VA)和中枢激活比(CAR),以及最大自愿收缩(MVC)和持续 MVC(sMVC),可以提供 CF 的信息。因此,本研究的目的是调查等热量运动前餐的影响:1)CHO 的高摄入量与低摄入量,2)CHO 的高摄入量与高血糖指数(GI)和低血糖指数(GI)对 90 分钟跑步后 MVC、VA 和 CAR 的影响。CHO 的高和低摄入量分别为 1.5 和 0.8 g/kg 体重,高和低 GI 分别约为 75 和 40。还测量了血液胰岛素、血清素、色氨酸和气体交换。高 CHO 在跑步后能更好地保持 sMVC、VA、CAR 和血清素,同时有更高的 CHO 氧化和胰岛素反应,而在低 CHO 中,sMVC、VA 和 CAR 的下降幅度更大,伴随着更高的血清素和脂肪氧化,胰岛素反应更低。这些观察表明存在中枢参与。同时,高 GI CHO 能更好地保持力量(sMVC)、CAR 和色氨酸,同时有更高的 CHO 氧化和胰岛素反应。本研究的结果表明,运动前摄入不同数量和质量的 CHO 可能会对 CF 产生影响,高 CHO 和高 GI 均能增加 CHO 氧化和胰岛素反应,从而减轻 CF。本研究主要采用神经生理技术以及气体交换和血液胰岛素、血清素和色氨酸数据,考察了碳水化合物干预(高和低:数量和质量)对长时间运动中心活性的影响。