Effects of a low-dose amino acid supplement on adaptations to cycling training in untrained individuals

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Authors
Vukovich, Matthew D.
Sharp, R. L.
Kesl, L. D.
Schaulis, D. L.
King, D. S.
Advisors
Issue Date
1997-12
Type
Article
Keywords
Clinical Trial , Controlled Clinical Trial
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Citation
International journal of sport nutrition. 1997 Dec; 7(4): 298-309.
Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine if amino acid supplementation influences blood and muscle lactate response to exercise and the time course of the metabolic adaptations to training. Two groups of untrained males (n = 7 each) were given (double-blind) a daily supplement (2.9 g.day-1) containing a mixture of leucine, isoleucine, valine, glutamine, and carnitine (EXP) or 3 g.day-1 of lactose (CON). Following 7 days of supplementation there was no significant change in VO2peak, time to exhaustion (TTX) at 120% VO2peak, or muscle and blood lactate in either EXP or CON. Subjects then initiated 6 weeks of combined aerobic and anaerobic training on a Monark cycle ergometer. It was found that amino acid supplementation had no effect on either blood or muscle lactate accumulation during exercise, while supplementation resulted in a faster adaptation in buffer capacity. Performance during intense exercise was not improved with amino acid supplementation.

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Description
The full text of this article is not available in SOAR. WSU users can access the article via commercial databases licensed by University Libraries: http://libcat.wichita.edu/vwebv/holdingsInfo?bibId=1327923.
Publisher
Human Kinetics
Journal
Book Title
Series
International Journal of Sport Nutrition
Int J Sport Nutr
PubMed ID
DOI
ISSN
1050-1606
EISSN