Caffeine increases performance and leads to a cardioprotective effect during intense exercise in cyclists.
Scientific reports
January 1, 1970
Felipe Sampaio-Jorge et al. (5 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Extracted Claims (2)
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
caffeine dietary strategies | neutral | athletic performance | male recreationally-trained cyclists | - | investigate the effects | #1 |
caffeine dietary strategies | neutral | cardiac autonomic response | male recreationally-trained cyclists | - | compare the impact | #2 |
Abstract
The present study was designed to investigate the effects of different caffeine dietary strategies to compare the impact on athletic performance and cardiac autonomic response. The order of the supplementation was randomly assigned: placebo(4-day)-placebo(acute)/PP, placebo(4-day)-caffeine(acute)/PC and caffeine(4-day)-caffeine(acute)/CC. Fourteen male recreationally-trained cyclists ingested capsules containing either placebo or caffeine (6 mg kg
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultAthletic PerformanceBicyclingCaffeineCardiotonic AgentsCentral Nervous System StimulantsCross-Over StudiesDouble-Blind MethodExerciseHeart RateHumansMaleOxygen Consumption
Study Links
PubMed ID34934054
Citation Metrics
Total Citations8
Citations/Year2.0
Relative Citation Ratio0.75
NIH Percentile39.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
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