American Journal of Sports Science and Medicine. 2017, 5(3), 53-56
DOI: 10.12691/AJSSM-5-3-3
Original Research

Ingestion of Caffeine and Carbohydrate Increases Average Power Output during a 10 mile Time Trial in Both Male and Female Cyclists

Ryan D. Mitchell1, and Amada Podczerwinski1

1Nutrition Science, The Sage Colleges, Troy, NY, USA

Pub. Date: November 02, 2017

Cite this paper

Ryan D. Mitchell and Amada Podczerwinski. Ingestion of Caffeine and Carbohydrate Increases Average Power Output during a 10 mile Time Trial in Both Male and Female Cyclists. American Journal of Sports Science and Medicine. 2017; 5(3):53-56. doi: 10.12691/AJSSM-5-3-3

Abstract

Previous researchers observed that elite male cyclists’ performance improves with combined ingestion of caffeine and carbohydrate. We carried out this study to determine if similar outcomes would be observed in a group of cyclists varying widely in age and racing experience as well as gender. We administered carbohydrate with or without the addition of 6 mg/kg body weight caffeine in a counterbalanced blind manner to ten trained male and female cyclists in the fed state one hour prior to 20 minutes of steady-state (SS) cycling at 60% VO2max power followed by a simulated 10-mile time trial (TT). Ventilation (VE), rate of oxygen consumption (VO2), respiratory exchange ratio (RER), and rate of perceived exertion (RPE) were measured during the SS, whereas completion time, average power output, heart rate (HR) and RPE were measured during the TT. The addition of caffeine resulted in a significant reduction in completion time (1.9%) and increased the average power output (5.0%), as well as significantly higher heart rates during the TT (2.9%). We observed no significant differences in VE, VO2, RER, RPE, and HR during the SS between treatments. Our data shows that the ingestion of 6 mg/kg of caffeine in combination with a 7.5% carbohydrate solution in male and female cyclists in the fed state improves short duration time trial performance as measured by completion time and average power output. These findings can be of great value to cyclists across a wide range of age and experience.

Keywords

cycling performance, ergogenic aid, short term

Copyright

Creative CommonsThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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