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Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players

Evidence suggests that carbohydrate-protein (CHO-PRO) drinks post-exercise are an advantageous nutritional recovery intervention. Resistance trained (n = 14, mean ± SD; age 19 ± 1 yr, mass 95 ± 9 kg, % fat 17 ± 4 % and BMI 28.5 ± 1.8 kg.m(−2)) male rugby players participated in a study investigating...

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Autores principales: COYLE, COLIN J., DONNE, BERNARD, MAHONY, NICHOLAS
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4738983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27182374
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author COYLE, COLIN J.
DONNE, BERNARD
MAHONY, NICHOLAS
author_facet COYLE, COLIN J.
DONNE, BERNARD
MAHONY, NICHOLAS
author_sort COYLE, COLIN J.
collection PubMed
description Evidence suggests that carbohydrate-protein (CHO-PRO) drinks post-exercise are an advantageous nutritional recovery intervention. Resistance trained (n = 14, mean ± SD; age 19 ± 1 yr, mass 95 ± 9 kg, % fat 17 ± 4 % and BMI 28.5 ± 1.8 kg.m(−2)) male rugby players participated in a study investigating effects of carbohydrate (CHO) and CHO-PRO drinks on subsequent resistance exercise performance. Following an initial resistance training (RT) protocol consisting of 8 circuits of 5 discrete exercises at 10 repetition maximum (RM), participants received 10 mL.kg(−1) BM of randomised sports drink (LCHO, HCHO and CHO-PRO) on completion of the RT protocol and at 120 min into a 240 min recovery period. Post-recovery, participants completed a test to failure (TTF) protocol performing as many circuits of the same exercises at 10-RM to failure. Individual exercise cumulative load (∑W) lifted and total work capacity (TWC) for each trial was recorded. Both ∑W and TWC were normalised for body mass (kg.kg(−1) BM). Data were analysed using repeated measures ANOVA with post-hoc Student-Neuman-Keuls pair-wise comparisons (P<0.05). Despite large intra-subject variability between trials, TWC normalised for body mass was significantly greater following CHO-PRO compared with HCHO and LCHO (188 ± 26 vs. 157 ± 21 and 150 ± 16 kg.kg(−1) BM, respectively; P<0.05). The ∑W lifted after ingestion of HCHO and LCHO were not significantly different despite differing CHO and caloric content. The CHO-PRO induced enhancement of recovery was possibly due to higher rates of glycogen restoration after the initial glycogen depleting RT protocol.
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spelling pubmed-47389832016-05-12 Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players COYLE, COLIN J. DONNE, BERNARD MAHONY, NICHOLAS Int J Exerc Sci Original Research Evidence suggests that carbohydrate-protein (CHO-PRO) drinks post-exercise are an advantageous nutritional recovery intervention. Resistance trained (n = 14, mean ± SD; age 19 ± 1 yr, mass 95 ± 9 kg, % fat 17 ± 4 % and BMI 28.5 ± 1.8 kg.m(−2)) male rugby players participated in a study investigating effects of carbohydrate (CHO) and CHO-PRO drinks on subsequent resistance exercise performance. Following an initial resistance training (RT) protocol consisting of 8 circuits of 5 discrete exercises at 10 repetition maximum (RM), participants received 10 mL.kg(−1) BM of randomised sports drink (LCHO, HCHO and CHO-PRO) on completion of the RT protocol and at 120 min into a 240 min recovery period. Post-recovery, participants completed a test to failure (TTF) protocol performing as many circuits of the same exercises at 10-RM to failure. Individual exercise cumulative load (∑W) lifted and total work capacity (TWC) for each trial was recorded. Both ∑W and TWC were normalised for body mass (kg.kg(−1) BM). Data were analysed using repeated measures ANOVA with post-hoc Student-Neuman-Keuls pair-wise comparisons (P<0.05). Despite large intra-subject variability between trials, TWC normalised for body mass was significantly greater following CHO-PRO compared with HCHO and LCHO (188 ± 26 vs. 157 ± 21 and 150 ± 16 kg.kg(−1) BM, respectively; P<0.05). The ∑W lifted after ingestion of HCHO and LCHO were not significantly different despite differing CHO and caloric content. The CHO-PRO induced enhancement of recovery was possibly due to higher rates of glycogen restoration after the initial glycogen depleting RT protocol. Berkeley Electronic Press 2012-01-15 /pmc/articles/PMC4738983/ /pubmed/27182374 Text en
spellingShingle Original Research
COYLE, COLIN J.
DONNE, BERNARD
MAHONY, NICHOLAS
Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title_full Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title_fullStr Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title_full_unstemmed Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title_short Effects of Carbohydrate-Protein Ingestion Post-Resistance Training in Male Rugby Players
title_sort effects of carbohydrate-protein ingestion post-resistance training in male rugby players
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4738983/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27182374
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