Effect of preexercise ingestion of modified cornstarch on substrate oxidation during endurance exercise.

Neil M Johannsen, Rick L Sharp
Author Information
  1. Neil M Johannsen: Health and Human Performance, Iowa State University, Ames, IA 50014, USA.

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate differences in substrate oxidation between dextrose (DEX) and unmodified (UAMS) and acid/alcohol-modified (MAMS) cornstarches. Seven endurance-trained men (VO2peak = 59.1 +/- 5.4 mL.kg-1.min-1) participated in 2 h of exercise (66.4% +/- 3.3% VO2peak) 30 min after ingesting 1 g/kg body weight of the experimental carbohydrate or placebo (PLA). Plasma glucose and insulin were elevated after DEX (P < 0.05) compared with UAMS, MAMS, and PLA. Although MAMS and DEX raised carbohydrate oxidation rate through 90 min of exercise, only MAMS persisted throughout 120 min (P < 0.05 compared with all trials). Exogenous-carbohydrate oxidation rate was higher in DEX than in MAMS and UAMS until 90 min of exercise. Acid/alcohol modification resulted in augmented carbohydrate oxidation with a small, sustained increase in exogenous-carbohydrate oxidation rate. MAMS appears to be metabolizable and available for oxidation during exercise.

MeSH Term

Adult
Analysis of Variance
Area Under Curve
Blood Glucose
Breath Tests
Carbohydrate Metabolism
Cross-Over Studies
Dietary Carbohydrates
Double-Blind Method
Glucose
Humans
Insulin
Male
Oxidation-Reduction
Oxygen Consumption
Physical Endurance
Starch

Chemicals

Blood Glucose
Dietary Carbohydrates
Insulin
Starch
Glucose

Word Cloud

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