Lamb Christopher, Collins-Shirley Fletcher, Rees-Millns Sion, Cowley Alex, Love Thomas D, Waldron Mark, Chen Yung-Chih, Metcalfe Richard S
Applied Sport, Technology, Exercise and Medicine Research Center, Swansea University, Wales, United Kingdom.
Welsh Institute of Performance Science (WIPS), Swansea University, Wales, United Kingdom.
Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2025 Mar 20;35(4):303-311. doi: 10.1123/ijsnem.2024-0239. Print 2025 Jul 1.
This study tested the hypothesis that delaying consumption of a carbohydrate-rich breakfast by 2 hr would impair prolonged high-intensity intermittent exercise performance in the afternoon. Fifteen intermittent games players (mean ± SD: age: 24 ± 6 years; V˙O2peak: 46 ± 6 ml·kg-1·min-1) completed a randomized, single-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study with two trials (EARLY and DELAY) matched for dietary intake. In EARLY, participants consumed a high-carbohydrate (semisolid) breakfast shake (2 g/kg BM maltodextrin, 1 ml/kg BM orange squash, 0.15 g/kg BM xanthan gum, 0.067 g/kg BM artificial sweetener, and 6 ml/kg BM water) at 8 a.m., followed by a taste and texture matched, but energy depleted, placebo shake 2 hr later. In DELAY, the order of these shakes was reversed. Three hours following a high-carbohydrate lunch (888 ± 107 Kcal, 145 ± 28 g carbohydrate), participants completed a 90-min intermittent cycling test, consisting of two 40-min halves, with 10 min of rest in between. Each half involved 18 repeated 2-min blocks of steady-state cycling (100 s; 35% Wmax), followed by 15 s of unloaded pedaling and a 6-s all-out sprint. There were no differences in peak power (first half: mean difference [95% confidence interval]: 6.6 [-10.9, 24.1] W, d = 0.03 and second half: 8.5 [-6.5, 23.6] W, d = 0.04) or mean power (first half: mean difference: 6.4 [-10.7, 23.5] W, d = 0.03 and second half: mean difference: 7.3 [-6.5, 21.3] W, d = 0.04) during the sprints between the DELAY and EARLY conditions. In contrast with our hypothesis, these data provide no evidence that delaying consumption of a carbohydrate-rich breakfast by 2 hr impairs prolonged high-intensity intermittent exercise performance in the afternoon.
将富含碳水化合物的早餐推迟2小时食用会损害下午长时间高强度间歇运动的表现。15名间歇性运动项目运动员(平均±标准差:年龄:24±6岁;峰值摄氧量:46±6毫升·千克⁻¹·分钟⁻¹)完成了一项随机、单盲、安慰剂对照的交叉研究,该研究有两项试验(早食组和延迟组),两组在饮食摄入量上相匹配。在早食组中,参与者于上午8点食用一份高碳水化合物(半固体)早餐奶昔(2克/千克体重的麦芽糊精、1毫升/千克体重的橙汁、0.15克/千克体重的黄原胶、0.067克/千克体重的人工甜味剂和6毫升/千克体重的水),2小时后再食用一份口味和质地匹配但不含能量的安慰剂奶昔。在延迟组中,这两种奶昔的顺序颠倒。在食用高碳水化合物午餐(888±107千卡,145±28克碳水化合物)3小时后,参与者完成了一项90分钟的间歇性自行车测试,该测试由两个40分钟的半场组成,中间休息10分钟。每个半场包括18次重复的2分钟稳态骑行(100秒;35%最大功率),随后是15秒的无负荷蹬踏和6秒的全力冲刺。在延迟组和早食组条件下的冲刺过程中,峰值功率(上半场:平均差异[95%置信区间]:6.6[-10.9,24.1]瓦,d=0.03;下半场:8.5[-6.5,23.6]瓦,d=0.04)或平均功率(上半场:平均差异:6.4[-10.7,23.5]瓦,d=0.03;下半场:平均差异:7.3[-6.5,21.3]瓦,d=0.04)均无差异。与我们的假设相反,这些数据没有提供证据表明将富含碳水化合物的早餐推迟2小时食用会损害下午长时间高强度间歇运动的表现。