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Effects of Acute Glycerol Ingestion on Performance, Metabolic and Biochemical Markers in International Athletes

Effects of Acute Glycerol Ingestion on Performance, Metabolic and Biochemical Markers in International Athletes

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT05295836
Enrollment
4
Registered
2022-03-25
Start date
2022-02-10
Completion date
2022-02-25
Last updated
2022-03-25

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

Conditions

Performance Enhancing Product Use, Change, Body Weight, Change, Body Temperature, Antioxidative Stress, Lactate Blood Increase, Thermal Sensation Disorders

Keywords

Power, Performance, Thermography, Metabolism, Endurance Sport, Ergogenic Aids, Oxygen uptake, Hydration, Hyperhydration

Brief summary

This clinical study evaluates the acute effect of glycerol ingestion on performance (power output), weight, urine specific gravity, biochemical (antioxidants and lactate) and metabolic (indirect calorimetry) markers in international athletes in hot conditions. The investigators hypothesized that acute glycerol ingestion can prevent performance loss (power generated at submaximal intensity) in hot conditions. To justify this hypothesis, the investigators will measure the aforementioned markers, which could establish a cause-effect relationship between acute glycerol intake and decreased performance loss in hot conditions.

Detailed description

All participants will be informed about the procedures and provide signed informed consent. The study will be conducted according to the guidelines of the Helsinki Declaration for Human Research and the protocol was approved by the Ethics Committee/Institutional Review Catholic University of Murcia (Code: CE091802). Study design This is a randomized crossover study. There are 3 types of intervention: water intake of 26 mL/kg/weight at 16°C (CON), 26 mL/kg/weight + placebo at 28°C (PLA) and intake of 1.2 g glycerol + 26 mL/kg/weight at 28°C (GLY). In addition, athletes will be instructed to take a individualized diet in relation to macronutrients (verified by dietary record) and they will follow their adjusted training schedule so that there would be no effect on the tests. Participants in both groups will be instructed not to consume supplements 3 weeks prior to the start of the study. Procedures Participants will visit the laboratory on five occasions. Visit 1 consists of a medical examination and a blood draw to determine health status. At visit 2, after a dinner the night before and a standard breakfast, an incremental test will be performed to determine the exercise zones in the rectangular test. At visits 3, 4 and 5, a record of the diet (individually set) will be performed regarding the former 7 days, followed by a rectangular treadmill test. Visit 1: Health status blood test: A general blood test will be performed. The blood will be drawn through a vein. (Fasting) Medical examination: A medical history of family and personal history, an electrocardiogram (ECG) at rest and a medical examination (auscultation, blood pressure, etc.) will be carried out to certify that the person is healthy and is not at risk to participate in the study. (Fasting) Visits 2: Incremental test with final ramp test will be performed on a cycle ergometer using a metabolic cart (Metalyzer 3B. Leipzig, Germany) to determine maximal fat oxidation zone (FatMax), ventilatory thresholds 1 (VT1) and 2 (VT2) and maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max). Participants will begin cycling at 35W for 2 min, increasing then by 35W every 2 min until RER\>1.05, initializing then the final ramp (+35W·min-1) until exhaustion. Visits 3: The rectangular test will be performed on a treadmill using the speed values obtained in the incremental test (15 sets x 2 min at 95% with 2:30 recovery at 85% of maximum speed between sets). Cardiorespiratory variables (VO2, VCO2, VO2R, VE/VO2, VE/VCO2, VE/VCO2, respiratory coefficient, respiratory frequency, carbohydrate oxidation (CHO), fat oxidation (FAT), running economy and energy expenditure) will be determined in the 1st, 5th, 10th and 15th series. For power measurement, each participant will wear the Stryd power meter, which is an inertial sensor (9.1 g) mounted on the foot, firmly attached to the shoe and according to the manufacturer's recommendations. The device stores at a sampling rate of 1 Hz the following variables: estimated power (PO), pace, cadence, leg sprint stiffness (LSS), form power, form power ratio, ground contact time (GCT), vertical oscillation, stride length. These variables will then be determined in the 1st, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test. According to information from the Stryd team, the device is operational out of the box and should not require any calibration, accepting a measurement error of 3 percent. Participants will fill in their height and body mass prior to use, which is required for PO estimation. The firmware version that will be used is 2.1.16 (released in August 2020). For lactate and antioxidant measurements, a Lactate Pro 2 meter and eBQC lab will be used on finger capillary blood at rest, after the 5th, 10th and after completion of the rectangular test. For body temperature, the investigators will use an infrared thermographic camera (FLIR) to measure heat distribution (head, trunk, lower and upper limbs in both anterior and posterior aspects of the body). Urine Samples Urine will be collected from the intake of water or water + glycerol or water + placebo until the start of the rectangular test and up to one hour after the rectangular test. The volume of urine excreted pre and post rectangular test will be recorded and the urine specific gravity will be analyzed.

Interventions

OTHERPLACEBO

Athletes will perform the rectangular test at a temperature of 28°C and ingested 26 mL/kg body weight + placebo one and half hours before the test.

DIETARY_SUPPLEMENTGLYCEROL

Athletes will perform the rectangular test at a temperature of 28°C and ingested 26 mL/kg body weight + 1.2 g of glycerol one and half hours before the test.

Sponsors

Francisco Javier Martínez Noguera
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
CROSSOVER
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE (Subject)

Intervention model description

A randomized crossover study will be conducted, in which 4 international walkers will perform 3 different conditions: CON) water intake of 26 mL/kg/weight at 16°C; PLA) 26 mL/kg/weight + placebo at 28°C and GLY) intake of 1.2 g glycerol + 26 mL/kg/weight at 28°C.

Eligibility

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

Inclusion criteria

* Be an international athlete with the Spanish national athletics team.

Exclusion criteria

* Are smokers or regular alcohol drinkers, * Have a metabolic, cardiorespiratory or digestive pathology or anomaly, * Have an injury in the prior 6 months * Are supplementing or medicating in the prior 2 weeks * Have non-normal values in the blood analysis parameters.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Body weightThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord body weight before and after the rectangular test
Urine specific gravityThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord urine specific gravity by means a digital refractometer (Atago) before and after the rectangular test
Power outputThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord the power produced by means the stryd sensor (shoe) in the 1st, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Body temperatureThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord body temperature by thermography of the head, trunk, and lower limbs, anterior and posterior in rest, after 5th and 10th series, and after completion of the rectangular test

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
VO2Throughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord the oxygen uptake (L/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
CO2Throughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord the carbon dioxide exhalation (L/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
RERThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord respiratory exchange ratio in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
VEThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord ventilation (L/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
FAT oxThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord fat oxidation (g/h) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
HC oxThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord carbohydrate oxidation (g/h) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
FRThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord respiratory frequency (breaths/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
EEThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord energy expenditure (kcal/h) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
VO2/RThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord oxygen consumption relative to weight (mL/min/kg) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
V'E/V'O2Throughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord ventilatory equivalents for oxygen (L/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
CadenceThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord cadence (steps per minute) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Leg spring stiffnessThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord leg spring stiffness (kN/m) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Form power ratioThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord form power ratio in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Form powerThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord form power (W) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Ground contact timeThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord ground contact time (ms) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
Vertical oscillationThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord vertical oscillation (cm) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
PO/RThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord power output relative to weight (W/kg) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
V'E/V'CO2Throughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord ventilatory equivalents for carbon dioxide (L/min) in 1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test
LactateThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord lactate in rest, after 5th and 10th series, and after completion of the rectangular test
Measurement of fast- and slow-acting antioxidants (Q1 and Q2) and total antioxidant capacity by a portable analyzer eBQC0101Throughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord the antioxidant markers in rest, after 5th and 10th series, and after completion of the rectangular test
Heart rateThroughout study completion, an average of 3 weeksRecord the heart rat in rest,1th, 5th, 10th and 15th series of the rectangular test

Countries

Spain

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026