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Maple Products and Exercise Performance

Ingestion of Maple Products During Exercise: Effects on Energy Metabolism and Time-trial Performance

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT02880124
Enrollment
76
Registered
2016-08-26
Start date
2016-07-11
Completion date
2018-03-30
Last updated
2019-08-21

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

Conditions

Carbohydrate Ingestion, Fuel Selection, Athletic Performance

Keywords

Isotope Labeling, Stable, Exercise, Physical, Calorimetry, Indirect, Athletic Performance, Sugar Maple

Brief summary

The purpose of this study is to compare the acute metabolic responses and time-trial performance following the ingestion of carbohydrate solutions containing either maple syrup, maple sap, corn syrup, a commercial sport drink or water.

Detailed description

The study will require 4 meetings for each subject: a 30-minute meeting to explain the project; a meeting of 2 hours (glucose tolerance test, at rest); a one-hour meeting (maximum oxygen consumption test (VO2max) during an exercise conducted on an electromagnetically braked cycle ergometer, and a meeting of about 4 hours for experimentation (120-min exercise on a stationary bicycle with ingestion of a solution carbohydrates or sweetened water, and a 20-km time trial). Visit #1 - Pre-participation (screening visit) Following an initial contact by phone or email, the subject will be invited to individual meetings which will last about 15 minutes. During the meeting, one of the project managers will check the eligibility of the potential subject in the study and, if eligible, will present him the details of the protocol specifying the discomforts and risks involved. The participant will be required to fill a Physical Activity Readiness Questionnaire (PAR-Q) and will be given a copy of the consent form. We will request the name and contact details of a person to contact in case of emergency, this information will be recorded and preserved in the subject matter. A period of at least three days will be allocated to make the decision whether to participate in the study or not. If the participant decides to participate in the study, he will be invited for the second visit (oral glucose tolerance test) and on this occasion will sign the consent form. Visit #2 - Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) This test will be performed at Exercise Physiology Laboratory at the Department of kinesiology from the University of Montreal under the procedure commonly used for these tests. This procedure requires the ingestion of 300 mL of water containing 75 g of glucose in the morning (around 8am) after 12 hours of fasting, and blood samples and on the tip of a finger at 0, 60 and 120 minutes for the measurement of blood glucose. Subjects with higher blood glucose than 5 mmol/L before ingestion of glucose and greater than 8 mmol/L after ingestion (60 or 120 min) will not be considered for the study. These glucose tolerance standards are more stringent than those of the World Health Organization, because the objective of this test is not a diagnosis on glucose tolerance or a prognosis of its future development, but just n include in the study subjects who have good glucose tolerance. Visit #3 - Maximum oxygen uptake testing: cycling VO2max This test will be conducted in the Exercise Physiology Laboratory at the Department of kinesiology from the University of Montreal. Exercise involves pedaling a stationary bike at a power output (resistance) gradually increasing until reaching VO2max. During the execution of the test, the subject is wearing surface electrodes to measure heart rate, a mouthpiece and nose clip to measure the volume of expired gas as well as the oxygen and carbon dioxide content to determine the consumption oxygen and carbon dioxide production. This type of testing is routinely used in our laboratory. The test can be stopped at any time by the will of the subject. For this test, guidelines established by the Exercise Physiology Laboratory at the Department of kinesiology from the University of Montreal will be followed. These guidelines are based on recommendations of ethics and safety of the American College of Sports Medicine. 4- Experimentation The tests will be conducted at the Exercise Physiology Laboratory at the Department of kinesiology from the University of Montreal. The exercise is carried out on stationary cycle ergometer. It lasts 120 minutes at a power output corresponding to 60% of the VO2max obtained during the maximal test. A volume of a carbohydrate solution (120 g, 6% carbohydrate by volume) or sweetened water will be administered to the subject before (571 mL) and during exercise (286 mL every 30 minutes). The following solutions will be administered in a balanced, randomized, double-blind model: maple sap, maple syrup, glucose, a commercial sports drink and water with a glucose trace (0.001% carbohydrate by volume). Under conditions where only a trace of water or glucose are administered, a natural sweetener (stevia) will be added to obtain a sweet taste similar to other conditions. Carbohydrate solutions will all be artificially enriched in 13C. The volume ingested after 30 minutes of exercise will be artificially enriched in deuterium (D2O, 8g incorporated in the ingestion of 286 mL).

Interventions

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTSolution ingestion

Subjects will be required to ingest 2 litres of the experimental solution, spread over the 2 hours of exercise. A first ingestion of 572 mL of solution will be made at rest, 30 minutes before starting exercise, and 286 mL will be ingested immediately before the start of exercise and every 30 minutes during the exercise period.

BEHAVIORALConstant load cycling

Subjects will be required to perform 2 hours of cycling exercise at a power output eliciting 60% of VO2max.

Subjects will be asked, twice, to provide a forced expiration into a 10 mL plastic tube in order to collect a sample expired gases. This procedure will be done immediately before blood sampling and ingestion of the solution, every 30 minutes.

A mouthpiece and nose plug will be placed on the subject and expired gases will be analyzed by a metabolic cart during 3 minutes. This procedure will be done immediately before expired gas collection, blood sampling and ingestion of the solution, every 30 minutes.

Subjects will be asked to fill out a short form on the palatability of the solution ingestion, after ingesting the first solution and at the end of exercise, after ingestion the last solution.

OTHERGastrointestinal

At the end of the time trial, subjects will be asked to fill out a short form on gastrointestinal issues they might have had during experimentation.

PROCEDUREBlood sampling

A catheter will be inserted in an antecubital vein and a saline solution will be continuously perfused to maintain the vessel open. 15 mL of blood will be collected every 30 minutes, immediately before ingesting the solution.

BEHAVIORALTime trial

Subjects will be required to complete a simulated 20-km time trial on the cycle ergometer set in linear mode (where resistance is proportional to pedalling cadence), starting at 70% of the peak power output for the cadence spontaneously adopted by the subject during 2 hours of exercise.

Sponsors

Fédération des producteurs acéricoles du Québec
CollaboratorUNKNOWN
Université de Montréal
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
DOUBLE (Subject, Investigator)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
MALE
Age
18 Years to 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Yes

Inclusion criteria

* Low alcohol consumption (\<3 drinks/week) * Not regularly taking medication for a known pathology * Regularly practices endurance sports (cycling, running, etc.)

Exclusion criteria

* Intolerant to glucose (according to WHO standards) * Musculoskeletal injury or illness affecting exercise performance * Failure to respect protocol guidelines (diet, exercise prior to experimentation, etc.)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Exogenous carbohydrate oxidationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocol, during 3 minutes of expired gas collection.Measured by indirect respiratory calorimetry combined with tracer techniques.
Exercise performance in the 20-km time trialAt the end of 2 hours of exerciseDuration to complete distance and mean power sustained during the performance

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Blood glucose concentrationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocolBlood is sampled using a venous catheter over about 60 seconds. Following centrifugation to extract the plasma, a small sample is used to measure glucose concentration.
Blood free fatty acid concentrationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocolBlood is sampled using a venous catheter over about 60 seconds. Following centrifugation to extract the plasma, a small sample is used to measure free fatty acid concentration.
Muscle glycogen oxidationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocol, during 3 minutes of expired gas collection.Measured by indirect respiratory calorimetry combined with tracer techniques.
Oxidation of glucose released by the liverEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocol, during 3 minutes of expired gas collection.Measured by indirect respiratory calorimetry combined with tracer techniques. Average of 3 minutes of steady-state expired gas collection.
Total carbohydrate oxidationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocol, during 3 minutes of expired gas collection.Measured by indirect respiratory calorimetry.
Blood lactate concentrationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocolBlood is sampled using a venous catheter over about 60 seconds. Following centrifugation to extract the plasma, a small sample is used to measure lactate concentration.
Blood insulin concentrationEvery 30 minutes during the exercise protocolBlood is sampled using a venous catheter over about 60 seconds. Following centrifugation to extract the plasma, a small sample is used to measure insulin concentration.

Other

MeasureTime frameDescription
Palatability scoreWithin 5 minutes after the first ingestion and within 5 minutes after the last ingestion.Score computed from ratings on a visual analog scale.
Score of gastrointestinal symptomsWithin 5 minutes after the end of exerciseScore computed from ratings on a visual analog scale.

Countries

Canada

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 19, 2026