Influence of caffeine on perception of effort, metabolism and exercise performance following a high-fat meal

Jul 4, 2006Journal of sports sciences

Caffeine's effects on effort, metabolism, and exercise after a high-fat meal

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Abstract

Caffeine co-ingested with a high fat meal resulted in significantly lower perceived exertion during exercise.

  • Ratings of perceived leg exertion were significantly lower during caffeine ingestion compared to the fat-only trial in both exercise experiments.
  • In Experiment 1, ratings of perceived breathlessness were lower on the fat + caffeine trial compared to fat-only, while heart rate was higher in Experiment 2.
  • Oxygen uptake, ventilation, blood glucose, lactate, and plasma glycerol levels were significantly higher during fat + caffeine trials than during fat-only trials.
  • In Experiment 2, plasma free fatty acids and blood pyruvate levels were significantly higher during fat + caffeine than fat-only trials.
  • Time to exhaustion was not significantly different between fat-only and fat + caffeine trials in both experiments.

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