Impact of Post-Exercise Fructose-Maltodextrin Ingestion on Subsequent Endurance Performance

Jun 26, 2020Frontiers in nutrition

How Drinking Fructose-Maltodextrin After Exercise May Affect Later Endurance Performance

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Abstract

Ingestion of a combination of fructose and glucose increased carbohydrate oxidation rates during recovery but did not improve time trial performance.

  • Eight participants engaged in a randomized double-blind study involving exhaustive exercise followed by recovery.
  • Carbohydrates were ingested at a rate of 1.2 g·kg·h in two forms: fructose and maltodextrin or glucose and maltodextrin.
  • During the first 45 minutes of steady state exercise, carbohydrate oxidation was greater in the fructose and maltodextrin group.
  • Overall carbohydrate oxidation rates trended higher in the fructose and maltodextrin group but were not statistically significant.
  • No significant differences were observed in time trial performance between the two carbohydrate ingestion conditions.

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Key numbers

37.41 ± 3.45 min (GLU + MD)
Time Trial Completion
Time taken to complete the time trial for GLU + MD condition.
1.86 ± 0.41 g·min (FRU + MD)
Carbohydrate Oxidation Rate
Oxidation rate of ingested carbohydrates during the first 45 minutes of steady-state exercise.
1.51 ± 0.37 g·min (GLU + MD)
Carbohydrate Oxidation Rate
Oxidation rate of ingested carbohydrates during the first 45 minutes of steady-state exercise.

Full Text

What this is

  • This study investigates the impact of ingesting fructose and glucose combined versus glucose alone on endurance performance post-exercise.
  • Eight endurance-trained participants completed trials with different carbohydrate recovery protocols after exhaustive exercise.
  • The main outcome measured was performance in a pre-loaded cycling time trial following a 4-hour recovery period.

Essence

  • Ingesting a combination of fructose and glucose increased carbohydrate oxidation rates during subsequent exercise but did not improve cycling performance compared to glucose alone.

Key takeaways

  • Ingested carbohydrate oxidation rates were higher in the fructose and maltodextrin (FRU + MD) group during the first 45 minutes of steady-state exercise compared to the glucose and maltodextrin (GLU + MD) group.
  • Despite increased carbohydrate oxidation with FRU + MD, there was no significant difference in time trial performance between the two carbohydrate conditions.
  • Plasma lactate concentrations were higher during recovery with FRU + MD, which may have influenced carbohydrate availability during subsequent exercise.

Caveats

  • One female participant's menstrual cycle was not controlled, which could affect metabolic responses.
  • Blood sample collection was inconsistent for some participants, potentially skewing plasma metabolite analysis.
  • Absence of direct measurements of muscle and liver glycogen levels presents a limitation in interpreting the results.

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