| Literature DB >> 29462969 |
Paula Rankin1,2,3, Adrian Landy4, Emma Stevenson5, Emma Cockburn6,7.
Abstract
Milk has become a popular post-exercise recovery drink. Yet the evidence for its use in this regard comes from a limited number of investigations utilising very specific exercise protocols, and mostly with male participants. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate the effects of post-exercise milk consumption on recovery from a sprinting and jumping protocol in female team-sport athletes. Eighteen females participated in an independent-groups design. Upon completion of the protocol participants consumed 500 mL of milk (MILK) or 500 mL of an energy-matched carbohydrate (CHO) drink. Muscle function (peak torque, rate of force development (RFD), countermovement jump (CMJ), reactive strength index (RSI), sprint performance), muscle soreness and tiredness, symptoms of stress, serum creatine kinase (CK) and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP) were determined pre- and 24 h, 48 h and 72 h post-exercise. MILK had a very likely beneficial effect in attenuating losses in peak torque (180○/s) from baseline to 72 h (0.0 ± 10.0% vs. -8.7 ± 3.7%, MILK v CHO), and countermovement jump (-1.1 ± 5.2% vs. -10.4 ± 6.7%) and symptoms of stress (-13.5 ± 7.4% vs. -18.7 ± 11.0%) from baseline to 24 h. MILK had a likely beneficial effect and a possibly beneficial effect on other peak torque measures and 5 m sprint performance at other timepoints but had an unclear effect on 10 and 20 m sprint performance, RSI, muscle soreness and tiredness, CK and hsCRP. In conclusion, consumption of 500 mL milk attenuated losses in muscle function following repeated sprinting and jumping and thus may be a valuable recovery intervention for female team-sport athletes following this type of exercise.Entities:
Keywords: female; milk; muscle damage; protein; recovery
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29462969 PMCID: PMC5852804 DOI: 10.3390/nu10020228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Peak torque at 180°/s for dominant knee extension in response to repeated sprinting and jumping for MILK (n = 9) and CHO (n = 9). Values are presented as means ± SD. ** Likely benefit of MILK. *** Very likely benefit of MILK.
Figure 2Countermovement jump performance in response to repeated sprinting and jumping for MILK (n = 9) and CHO (n = 9). Values are presented as means ± SD. *** Very likely benefit of MILK. ** Likely benefit of MILK.
Effects on muscle function following repeated sprinting and jumping.
| Variable | Time Frame | Mean Effect a, ±90% CI b | Qualitative Inference c |
|---|---|---|---|
| Peak Torque 60°/s Dominant leg extension | B-24 h | 6.0, ±7.7 | Likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | 4.6, ±8.7 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 7.2, ±10.3 | Unclear | |
| Peak Torque 60°/s Dominant leg flexion | B-24 h | 8.7, ±13.5 | Possibly beneficial |
| B-48 h | 3.3, ±13.4 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 9.4, ±12.3 | Likely beneficial | |
| Peak Torque 180°/s Dominant leg extension | B-24 h | 7.2, ±6.4 | Likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | 10.8, ±9.6 | Likely beneficial | |
| B-72 h | 9.9, ±6.8 | Very likely beneficial | |
| Peak Torque 180°/s Dominant leg flexion | B-24 h | 12.4, ±13.8 | Likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | 8.0, ±18.9 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 10.2, ±12.1 | Likely beneficial | |
| RFD (0–200 ms) | B-24 h | 22.7, ±31.7 | Likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | 21.6, ±43.4 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 24.0, ±46.0 | Unclear | |
| CMJ | B-24 h | 9.9, ±6.2 | Very likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | 8.7, ±6.9 | Likely beneficial | |
| B-72 h | 6.1, ±4.7 | Likely beneficial | |
| RSI | B-24 h | 2.6, ±11.3 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | 2.6, ±15.1 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 5.6, ±12.2 | Unclear | |
| 5 m sprint | B-24 h | −2.7, ±3.7 | Possibly beneficial |
| B-48 h | −3.3, ±5.3 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | −0.8, ±3.6 | Unclear | |
| 10 m sprint | B-24 h | −1.4, ±3.5 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | −1.8, ±3.9 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | −0.5, ±3.9 | Unclear | |
| 20 m sprint | B-24 h | −1.5, ±2.6 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | −1.3, ±2.9 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 0.3, ±2.2 | Unclear |
a Mean effect refers to MILK minus CHO; b ± 90% CI: add and subtract this number to the mean effect to obtain the 90% confidence intervals for the true difference; c Qualitative Inference represents the likelihood that the true value will have the observed magnitude.
Effects on soreness, tiredness, symptoms of stress, CK and hsCRP following repeated sprinting and jumping.
| Variable | Time Frame | Mean Effect a, ±/x/÷ 90% CI b | Qualitative Inference c |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muscle soreness (Squat) | B-24 h | −1.7, ±2.8 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | −1.1, ±2.1 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | −0.7, ±1.2 | Unclear | |
| Muscle soreness (Isokinetic knee extension/flexion) | B-24 h | −1.4, ±2.2 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | −1.1, ±2.3 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | −1.0, ±2.6 | Likely beneficial | |
| Muscle tiredness | B-24 h | −2.0, ±3.0 | Unclear |
| B-48 h | −1.6, ±3.2 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | −1.4, ±2.3 | Unclear | |
| DALDA B | B-24 h | −2.0, ±2.4 | Very likely beneficial |
| B-48 h | −1.8, ±3.0 | Likely beneficial | |
| B-72 h | −1.0, ±2.6 | Unclear | |
| CK | B-2 h | 1.1, x/÷1.3 | Unclear |
| B-24 h | 1.1, x/÷1.6 | Unclear | |
| B-48 h | 1.3, x/÷ 1.8 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 1.3, x/÷1.8 | Unclear | |
| hsCRP | B-2 h | 1.1, x/÷1.2 | Unclear |
| B-24 h | 1.2, x/÷1.8 | Unclear | |
| B-48 h | 1.4, x/÷1.8 | Unclear | |
| B-72 h | 1.3, x/÷1.7 | Unclear |
a Mean effect refers to MILK minus CHO; b ± 90% CI: add and subtract this number to the mean effect to obtain the 90% confidence intervals for the true difference; Qualitative Inference represents the likelihood that the true value will have the observed magnitude.