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Disposal of Oral Fructose During Exercise

Disposal of Oral Fructose During Exercise

Status
Completed
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Observational
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT01128647
Enrollment
7
Registered
2010-05-24
Start date
2009-04-30
Completion date
2010-03-31
Last updated
2013-02-13

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Carbohydrate Metabolism at Exercise

Brief summary

There is evidence that total carbohydrate oxidation during exercise is higher after ingestion of fructose:glucose mixture than after ingestion of equimolar amounts of glucose alone. This may possible contribute to improve performance, provided that the extra carbohydrate oxidation induced by fructose:glucose co-ingestion occurs in skeletal muscle. The present study aims at assessing the hypothesis that, during exercise, a substantial portion of oral fructose is converted into lactate prior to oxidation To identify the major pathways of fructose disposal, 7 healthy endurance trained male volunteers will be studied. For each participant the following measurement will be performed * a measurement of maximal oxygen consumption (VO2 max) on an ergometric bicycle * a 2 hour exercise protocol with oral administration of a glucose drink. 6,6-2H2 glucose (0.44 µmol/kg/min) and 13C3 lactate (2.25 µmol/kg/min) will be infused to calculate glucose and lactate kinetics. Indirect calorimetry will be performed to measure total carbohydrate oxidation and expired 13CO2 will be monitored to calculate whole body lactate oxidation * a 2 hour exercise protocol with oral administration of a glucose:fructose (72 + 48 g every hour) mixture. 6,6-2H2 glucose (0.44 µmol/kg/min) and 13C3 lactate (2.25 µmol/kg/min) will be infused to calculate glucose and lactate kinetics. Indirect calorimetry will be performed to measure total carbohydrate oxidation and expired 13CO2 will be monitored to calculate whole body lactate oxidation * a 2 hour exercise protocol with oral administration of a glucose:fructose (72 + 48 g every hour) mixture with fructose labelled with 13C6 fructose to evaluate exogenous fructose metabolic fate and oxidation. 6,6-2H2 glucose (0.44 µmol/kg/min) will be infused to calculate glucose kinetics. Fructose conversion into lactate and glucose will be evaluated by monitoring the systemic appearance of plasma 13C-labelled lactate and 13C-labelled glucose. Total exogenous fructose oxidation will be measured by monitoring 13CO2 production. Based on these measurements, semi-quantitative estimates of total fructose oxidation, fructose conversion into glucose, fructose conversion into lactate, and oxidation of fructose-derived lactate will be obtained

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTFructose:glucose drink
DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTglucose drink

Sponsors

University of Lausanne
Lead SponsorOTHER

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
MALE
Age
18 Years to 35 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* age between 18 and 35 years * males * good physical health * weekly cycling training sessions (\> 3 sessions/week)

Exclusion criteria

* diabetes or glucose intolerance * past history of heart disease * alcohol intake \> 30 g/day * smokers * drug consumption

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frame
Fructose conversion into lactateduring a 2 hour-exercise at 60% VO2 max

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Total exogenous fructose oxidationduring a 2 hour-exercise at 60% VO2 max
Fructose conversion into glucoseduring a 2 hour-exercise at 60% VO2 max
Oxidation of lactate derived from fructoseduring a 2 hour-exercise at 60% VO2 max

Countries

Switzerland

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Mar 30, 2026