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Title: Effect of carbohydrate ingestion on central fatigue during prolonged running exercise in moderate hypoxia
To determine whether acute exposure to moderate hypoxia alters central and peripheral fatigue and to test whether carbohydrate ingestion impacts fatigue characteristics, 12 trained runners completed three running trials lasting 1 h each at 65% of normoxic maximum oxygen uptake. The first trial was performed in normoxia [inspired O 2 fraction ([Formula: see text]) = 0.21], and the last two trials were completed in hypoxia ([Formula: see text] = 0.15). Participants ingested a placebo drink in normoxia (NORM-PLA), a placebo drink in hypoxia (HYP-PLA), or a carbohydrate solution in hypoxia (HYP-CHO). HYP conditions were randomized. Peripheral [change in potentiated quadriceps twitch force (ΔQ tw,pot )] and central [change in voluntary activation (ΔVA)] fatigue were assessed via preexercise-to-postexercise changes in magnetically evoked quadriceps twitch. In HYP, blood was drawn to determine the ratio of free-tryptophan (f-TRP) to branched-chain amino acids (BCAA). After exercise, peripheral fatigue was reduced to a similar degree in normoxia and hypoxia (ΔQ tw,pot  = −4.5 ± 1.3% and −4.0 ± 1.5% in NORM-PLA and HYP-PLA, respectively; P = 0.61). Central fatigue was present after normoxic and hypoxic exercise but to a greater degree in HYP-PLA compared with NORM-PLA (ΔVA: −4.7 ± 0.9% vs. −1.9 ± 0.7%; P < 0.01). Carbohydrate ingestion did not influence central fatigue (ΔVA in HYP-CHO: −5.7 ± 1.2%; P = 0.51 vs. HYP-PLA). After exercise, no differences were observed in the ratio of f-TRP to BCAA between HYP-PLA and HYP-CHO ( P = 0.67). Central fatigue increased during prolonged running exercise in moderate hypoxia although the ratio of f-TRP to BCAA remained unchanged. Ingesting carbohydrates while running in hypoxia did not influence fatigue development. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Hypoxic exposure influences the origin of exercise-induced fatigue and the rate of fatigue development depending on the severity of hypoxia. Our data suggest that moderate hypoxia increases central, but not peripheral, fatigue in trained runners exercising at 65% of normoxic maximum oxygen uptake. The increase in central fatigue was unaffected by carbohydrate intake and occurred although the ratio of free tryptophan to branched-chain amino acids remained unchanged.  more » « less
Award ID(s):
1726633
PAR ID:
10181922
Author(s) / Creator(s):
; ; ; ; ;
Date Published:
Journal Name:
Journal of Applied Physiology
Volume:
126
Issue:
1
ISSN:
8750-7587
Page Range / eLocation ID:
141 to 151
Format(s):
Medium: X
Sponsoring Org:
National Science Foundation
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