Caffeine...This
new study suggests it doesn't boost short-term performance - but increases
the heart rate.
Caffeine....This
new study suggests it doesn't boost short-term performance - but it
increases the heart rate.
Two questions that have intrigued sports scientists for 25 years are:
does caffeine ingestion prior to exercise cause an improved performance,
and if it does, what mechanisms are responsible for that improvement?
Early research indicated that caffeine ingestion increased time to exhaustion
in endurance exercise because it caused a metabolic response in humans.
The reason for this was thought to be that the presence of caffeine
in the blood appeared to stimulate the release of the catecholamines
adrenaline and noradrenaline, which in turn brought about an increase
in the availability of fat as fuel for the working muscles; the effect
of this was thought to be a sparing of muscle glycogen, or carbohydrate
stores.
Other possible explanations
for caffeine's action - for instance, that it may result in more forceful
muscular contractions by affecting the action of calcium in the muscle
- have been discounted because of the unfeasibly large (probably toxic)
amount of caffeine needed to promote such actions. This leaves the stimulation
of catecholamine release as the most likely explanation for caffeine's
ergogenic effect, and, for this reason, most studies investigating caffeine's
effect on performance have concentrated on endurance exercise. There
would appear to be little point in studying its effect on short-term
(ie, less than five minutes), intense (90-100% VO2max) exercise, where
the provision of glycogen is not a limiting factor.
Nevertheless, some
research has shown that caffeine does improve short-term performance
(see, for instance, PP, December 1993, pp 5-6) although the results
have not always been statistically significant. In such exercise, it
is believed that caffeine must act directly on the muscle or on the
central nervous system if it is to alter performance.
Withdrawal symptoms
In a recent study at the University of Brighton, a group of undergraduate
sports scientists took part in an experiment which was designed to test
whether caffeine does affect short-term performance. The subjects were
given a gelatine capsule containing either a placebo or caffeine (5mg/kg
body mass) one hour prior to a 1500m time-trial performed on a friction-braked
cycle. Each subject chose his own strategy to cover the 1500m as quickly
as possible. Subjects were asked to refrain from caffeine ingestion
for two weeks prior to the first test and until after the second test
had been completed. The second test was carried out by all subjects
one week after the first trial at the same time of day.
The potency of caffeine
as a drug was initially illustrated by the fact that many of the students
experienced quite powerful withdrawal symptoms. When the placebo and
caffeine capsules were given out, 81 per cent of the subjects correctly
identified that they had taken caffeine and 94 per cent correctly identified
that they had taken the placebo. Caffeine ingestion did not cause any
significant changes in heart rates during the warm-up, or after a recovery
period, and it did not alter the time taken to reach half-distance.
It also did not significantly change the time taken to complete the
1500m, or mean VO2 (oxygen uptake). It did, however, result in a significantly
increased mean and peak exercise heart rate.
The conclusion from
all this? Caffeine did not cause an improvement in this type of performance
but it did cause a significant increase in exercise heart rate. That
being said, the fact that the mean time to complete the trial was 1.2
secs quicker during the caffeine trial than during the placebo initially
looked exciting. This is because the level of improvement required by
an athlete may be smaller than the level of scientific significance.
Does this therefore suggest that caffeine ingestion would be a worthwhile
tactic before competing in events of this nature? No, for the following
reason.
The learning effect
Although no significant differences were found between the performance
times when expressed by trial order, mean performance during the second
trial was 1.3 secs quicker. Similarly, mean time taken to perform the
last 750m was 2.6 secs quicker during the second trial. This implies
that there was a learning effect, or, more simply, the subjects got
better at performing the task once they got used to it.
The results from
this experiment suggest that the most likely cause of caffeine's ergogenic
effect in endurance events is that it does stimulate catecholamine release.
This was borne out by the significant increase in the exercise heart
rate found in this experiment, because catecholamines accelerate the
depolarisation of the sinus node and cause the heart to beat faster.
The increase in the warm-up and recovery heart rates in this experiment
were not significant, though they were clearly elevated during the caffeine
trial. The greater increase in heart rates during the exercise may have
been caused by additional catecholamine release stimulated by physical
performance.
This experiment
suggests that there is no benefit in using caffeine as an ergogenic
aid in short-term, high-intensity exercise. In addition, the changes
in heart rates during the experiment, together with some of the comments
from the students about how they actually felt (ranging from 'profoundly
sick' to 'weird') did show that caffeine is a very potent drug even
when only a moderate dose (5mg/kg) is taken. This dosage would result
in urinary caffeine levels below the limit set by the International
Olympic Committee for competition. The unpleasant side-effects might
cause even endurance athletes to have second thoughts about using caffeine.
by Lee Oliver
Source: www.pponline.co.uk/encyc/0087.htm