Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists

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Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists. / Hansen, Mette; Bangsbo, Jens; Jensen, Jørgen; Krause-Jensen, Matilde; Bibby, Bo Martin; Sollie, Ove; Hall, Ulrika Andersson; Madsen, Klavs.

I: Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, Bind 13, 9, 2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Hansen, M, Bangsbo, J, Jensen, J, Krause-Jensen, M, Bibby, BM, Sollie, O, Hall, UA & Madsen, K 2016, 'Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists', Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, bind 13, 9. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4

APA

Hansen, M., Bangsbo, J., Jensen, J., Krause-Jensen, M., Bibby, B. M., Sollie, O., Hall, U. A., & Madsen, K. (2016). Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition, 13, [9]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4

Vancouver

Hansen M, Bangsbo J, Jensen J, Krause-Jensen M, Bibby BM, Sollie O o.a. Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists. Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition. 2016;13. 9. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4

Author

Hansen, Mette ; Bangsbo, Jens ; Jensen, Jørgen ; Krause-Jensen, Matilde ; Bibby, Bo Martin ; Sollie, Ove ; Hall, Ulrika Andersson ; Madsen, Klavs. / Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists. I: Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition. 2016 ; Bind 13.

Bibtex

@article{5bf39b6ac5c74b87bb40af0320ce4ce9,
title = "Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists",
abstract = "Background: Training camps for top-class endurance athletes place high physiological demands on the body. Focus on optimizing recovery between training sessions is necessary to minimize the risk of injuries and improve adaptations to the training stimuli. Carbohydrate supplementation during sessions is generally accepted as being beneficial to aid performance and recovery, whereas the effect of protein supplementation and timing is less well understood. We studied the effects of protein ingestion during training sessions on performance and recovery of elite cyclists during a strenuous training camp.Methods: In a randomized, double-blinded study, 18 elite cyclists consumed either a whey protein hydrolysate-carbohydrate beverage (PRO-CHO, 14 g protein/h and 69 g CHO/h) or an isocaloric carbohydrate beverage (CHO, 84 g/h) during each training session for six days (25-29 h cycling in total). Diet and training were standardized and supervised. The diet was energy balanced and contained 1.7 g protein/kg/day. A 10-s peak power test and a 5-min all-out performance test were conducted before and after the first training session and repeated at day 6 of the camp. Blood and saliva samples were collected in the morning after overnight fasting during the week and analyzed for biochemical markers of muscle damage, stress, and immune function.Results: In both groups, 5-min all-out performance was reduced after the first training session and at day 6 compared to before the first training session, with no difference between groups. Peak power in the sprint test did not change significantly between tests or between groups. In addition, changes in markers for muscle damage, stress, and immune function were not significantly influenced by treatment.Conclusions: Intake of protein combined with carbohydrate during cycling at a training camp for top cyclists did not result in marked performance benefits compared to intake of carbohydrates when a recovery drink containing adequate protein and carbohydrate was ingested immediately after each training session in both groups. These findings suggest that the addition of protein to a carbohydrate supplement consumed during exercise does not improve recovery or performance in elite cyclists despite high demands of daily exhaustive sessions during a one-week training camp.",
author = "Mette Hansen and Jens Bangsbo and J{\o}rgen Jensen and Matilde Krause-Jensen and Bibby, {Bo Martin} and Ove Sollie and Hall, {Ulrika Andersson} and Klavs Madsen",
note = "CURIS 2016 NEXS 080",
year = "2016",
doi = "10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "International Society of Sports Nutrition. Journal",
issn = "1550-2783",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Protein intake during training sessions has no effect on performance and recovery during a strenuous training camp for elite cyclists

AU - Hansen, Mette

AU - Bangsbo, Jens

AU - Jensen, Jørgen

AU - Krause-Jensen, Matilde

AU - Bibby, Bo Martin

AU - Sollie, Ove

AU - Hall, Ulrika Andersson

AU - Madsen, Klavs

N1 - CURIS 2016 NEXS 080

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - Background: Training camps for top-class endurance athletes place high physiological demands on the body. Focus on optimizing recovery between training sessions is necessary to minimize the risk of injuries and improve adaptations to the training stimuli. Carbohydrate supplementation during sessions is generally accepted as being beneficial to aid performance and recovery, whereas the effect of protein supplementation and timing is less well understood. We studied the effects of protein ingestion during training sessions on performance and recovery of elite cyclists during a strenuous training camp.Methods: In a randomized, double-blinded study, 18 elite cyclists consumed either a whey protein hydrolysate-carbohydrate beverage (PRO-CHO, 14 g protein/h and 69 g CHO/h) or an isocaloric carbohydrate beverage (CHO, 84 g/h) during each training session for six days (25-29 h cycling in total). Diet and training were standardized and supervised. The diet was energy balanced and contained 1.7 g protein/kg/day. A 10-s peak power test and a 5-min all-out performance test were conducted before and after the first training session and repeated at day 6 of the camp. Blood and saliva samples were collected in the morning after overnight fasting during the week and analyzed for biochemical markers of muscle damage, stress, and immune function.Results: In both groups, 5-min all-out performance was reduced after the first training session and at day 6 compared to before the first training session, with no difference between groups. Peak power in the sprint test did not change significantly between tests or between groups. In addition, changes in markers for muscle damage, stress, and immune function were not significantly influenced by treatment.Conclusions: Intake of protein combined with carbohydrate during cycling at a training camp for top cyclists did not result in marked performance benefits compared to intake of carbohydrates when a recovery drink containing adequate protein and carbohydrate was ingested immediately after each training session in both groups. These findings suggest that the addition of protein to a carbohydrate supplement consumed during exercise does not improve recovery or performance in elite cyclists despite high demands of daily exhaustive sessions during a one-week training camp.

AB - Background: Training camps for top-class endurance athletes place high physiological demands on the body. Focus on optimizing recovery between training sessions is necessary to minimize the risk of injuries and improve adaptations to the training stimuli. Carbohydrate supplementation during sessions is generally accepted as being beneficial to aid performance and recovery, whereas the effect of protein supplementation and timing is less well understood. We studied the effects of protein ingestion during training sessions on performance and recovery of elite cyclists during a strenuous training camp.Methods: In a randomized, double-blinded study, 18 elite cyclists consumed either a whey protein hydrolysate-carbohydrate beverage (PRO-CHO, 14 g protein/h and 69 g CHO/h) or an isocaloric carbohydrate beverage (CHO, 84 g/h) during each training session for six days (25-29 h cycling in total). Diet and training were standardized and supervised. The diet was energy balanced and contained 1.7 g protein/kg/day. A 10-s peak power test and a 5-min all-out performance test were conducted before and after the first training session and repeated at day 6 of the camp. Blood and saliva samples were collected in the morning after overnight fasting during the week and analyzed for biochemical markers of muscle damage, stress, and immune function.Results: In both groups, 5-min all-out performance was reduced after the first training session and at day 6 compared to before the first training session, with no difference between groups. Peak power in the sprint test did not change significantly between tests or between groups. In addition, changes in markers for muscle damage, stress, and immune function were not significantly influenced by treatment.Conclusions: Intake of protein combined with carbohydrate during cycling at a training camp for top cyclists did not result in marked performance benefits compared to intake of carbohydrates when a recovery drink containing adequate protein and carbohydrate was ingested immediately after each training session in both groups. These findings suggest that the addition of protein to a carbohydrate supplement consumed during exercise does not improve recovery or performance in elite cyclists despite high demands of daily exhaustive sessions during a one-week training camp.

U2 - 10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4

DO - 10.1186/s12970-016-0120-4

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 26949378

VL - 13

JO - International Society of Sports Nutrition. Journal

JF - International Society of Sports Nutrition. Journal

SN - 1550-2783

M1 - 9

ER -

ID: 157433715