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. 2021 Apr 1;14(2):60-75.
doi: 10.70252/QGKH6961. eCollection 2021.

Acute Beet Juice Supplementation Does Not Improve 30- or 60-second Maximal Intensity Performance in Anaerobically Trained Athletes

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Acute Beet Juice Supplementation Does Not Improve 30- or 60-second Maximal Intensity Performance in Anaerobically Trained Athletes

Scott A Conger et al. Int J Exerc Sci. .

Abstract

Research suggests that beet juice is beneficial during aerobic exercise. However, the impact of beet juice during primarily anaerobic exercise is equivocal. The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of acute beet juice supplementation on maximal intensity performance during 30-s and 60-s maximal-intensity cycling sprints. Using a double-blind, crossover-study design, 14 anaerobically trained male hockey players completed six Wingate cycling tests: familiarization trials of a 30-s and 60-s Wingate test, followed by 30-s Wingate placebo/beet juice trials, and 60-s Wingate placebo/beet juice trials. Repeated measures ANOVAs were used to compare the change in power between conditions over the duration of each trial. Paired t-tests were run to compare performance between conditions of various work and power variables. One-way ANOVAs were utilized to compare the change between conditions of the 30-s test to the change between conditions of the 60-s test. Beet juice supplementation yielded no statistical differences from placebo in any of the measured variables during the 30-s or 60-s tests (p > 0.05). The percent change for fatigue index was significantly different between the 30-s and 60-s tests (p = 0.032) suggesting less fatigue with beet juice supplementation. Overall, beet juice did not improve maximal intensity performance during 30-s or 60-s cycling sprint tests. Performance during the 60-s bout was not impacted to a greater extent than the 30-s bout after beet juice supplementation. These results suggest that beet juice supplementation does not improve short-duration exercise performance in anaerobically trained athletes.

Keywords: Wingate; beetroot juice; dietary nitrate; power; sprint.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Changes in power (A), pedaling speed (B), relative power (C) and Fatigue Index (D) during 30-s trial after consumption of beet juice vs. placebo (n = 14). In Panels A–C, data represent group mean ± SD. In Panel D, a higher FI % indicates a greater rate of fatigue that occurred over the course of the test. Dotted lines represent individual participant responses. Mean values are represented by the solid line. There were no significant differences between beet and placebo conditions (p > 0.05).
Figure 2
Figure 2
Changes in power after consumption of beet juice vs. placebo during the 30-s test from the 10Hz data (n = 8). There was no overall significant difference between the beet juice and placebo conditions (p = 0.380).
Figure 3
Figure 3
Changes in power (A), pedaling speed (B), relative power (C) and Fatigue Index (D) during 60-s trial after consumption of beet juice vs. placebo (n = 14). In Panels A–C, data represent group mean ± SD. In Panel D, a higher FI % indicates a greater rate of fatigue that occurred over the course of the test. Dotted lines represent individual participant responses. Mean values are represented by the solid line. There were no significant differences between beet and placebo conditions (p > 0.05).
Figure 4
Figure 4
Changes in power after consumption of beet juice vs. placebo during the 60-s test from the 10Hz data (n = 8). There was no overall significant difference between the beet juice and placebo conditions (p = 0.093).

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