Pediatric exercise science | 2021

Carbohydrate Drink Use During 30 Minutes of Variable-Intensity Exercise Has No Effect on Exercise Performance in Premenarchal Girls.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nThis study examined the physiological, perceptual, and performance effects of a 6% carbohydrate (CHO) drink during variable-intensity exercise (VIE) and a postexercise test in premenarchal girls.\n\n\nMETHODS\nA total of 10 girls (10.4 [0.7]\xa0y) participated in the study. VO2peak was assessed, and the girls were familiarized with VIE and performance during the first visit. The trial order (CHO and placebo) was randomly assigned for subsequent visits. The drinks were given before VIE bouts and 1-minute performance (9\xa0mL/kg total). Two 15-minute bouts of VIE were completed (10 repeated sequences of 20%, 55%, and 95% power at VO2peak and maximal sprints) before a 1-minute performance sprint.\n\n\nRESULTS\nThe mean power, peak power, heart rate (HR), %HRpeak, and rating of perceived exertion during VIE did not differ between trials. However, the peak power decreased, and the rating of perceived exertion increased from the first to the second bout. During the 1-minute performance, there were no differences between the trial (CHO vs placebo) for HR (190 [9] vs 189 [9]\xa0bpm), %HRpeak (97.0% [3.2%] vs 96.6% [3.0%]), rating of perceived exertion (7.8 [2.3] vs 8.1 [1.9]), peak power (238 [70] vs 235 [60]\xa0W), fatigue index (54.7% [10.0%] vs 55.9% [12.8%]), or total work (9.4 [2.6] vs 9.4 [2.1]\xa0kJ).\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nCHO supplementation did not alter physiological, perceptual, or performance responses during 30\xa0minutes of VIE or postexercise sprint performance in premenarchal girls.

Volume None
Pages \n 1-5\n
DOI 10.1123/pes.2020-0050
Language English
Journal Pediatric exercise science

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