| Literature DB >> 30594211 |
Luis M López-González1, Antonio J Sánchez-Oliver2,3, Fernando Mata1, Pablo Jodra4, Jose Antonio5, Raúl Domínguez6.
Abstract
Caffeine used as a supplement has been shown to improve physical and cognitive performance in several sport modalities due to its effects on the central nervous system. This review assesses the direct effects of caffeine supplementation on performance in combat sports. Using the PRISMA (Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis) guidelines, relevant studies were identified through the Medline, Scopus and SPORTDiscus databases. Of 1053 search results, only 9 articles fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Of these, three studies detected no ergogenic effect of caffeine supplementation, while six studies did observe a significant positive effect. Supplementation with 3-6 mg/kg of caffeine was found to increase the glycolytic contribution to energy metabolism during the execution of real or simulated combats, as indicated by elevated blood lactate concentrations. Caffeine intake was also noted to improve levels of strength, power and upper arm muscular endurance. These effects were not paralleled by an increase in the exertion perceived by the athlete.Entities:
Keywords: Athlete; Ergogenic aid; Sport performance; Sport supplements
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30594211 PMCID: PMC6310931 DOI: 10.1186/s12970-018-0267-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Fig. 1Article selection process. The present systematic review followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) guidelines [54]
Summary and results of the nine studies reviewed examining the impacts of acute caffeine supplementation on combat sports performance
| Ref. | Participants | Supplementation | Test | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Felippe et al. [ | Trained judo athletes ( | EC1: 6 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | 3 x SJFT | ANOVA indicated differences between treatments: |
| Diaz-Lara et al. [ | Elite Brazilian jiu-jitsu athletes ( | EC1: 3 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | Díaz-Lara et al. [ | Hand grip strength (pre): |
| Diaz-Lara et al. [ | Elite Brazilian jiu-jitsu athletes (n = 14) | EC1: 3 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | Hand grip strength | Hand grip strength: |
| Astley et al. [ | Young national competition judo athletes ( | EC1: 4 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | SJFT | Total knockdowns: EC1 improved 31.22% vs EC2 (29.0 +/- 2.6 vs 22.1 +/- 3.4) |
| Aedma et al. [ | Brazilian jiu-jitsu practitioners and wrestlers (n = 14) | EC1: 5 mg/kg caffeine (30 min pretest) | 4 x arm ergometer test (6 × 15 s + 40 s rest). | Average and peak power recorded in test: significant time but no treatment differences detected by ANOVA |
| Lopes-Silva et al. [ | National and/or international competition taekwondists ( | EC1: 5 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | 3 x simulated taekwondo match rounds | No differences in any of the performance variables examined. |
| Cortez et al. [ | National and/or international competition taekwondists ( | EC1: 5 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) | 3 x dollyo chagi circular kick pre and post test of 3 × 60 s CMJ | Dollyo chagi (pre): |
| Lopes-Silva et al. [ | Trained judo athletes ( | EC1: 6 mg/kg caffeine (60 min pretest) following weight loss protocol | 3 x SJFT | ANOVA confirmed no effects according to time or treatment |
| Santos et al. [ | Trained taekwondo athletes (n = 10) | EC1: 5 mg/kg caffeine (50 min pretest) | 2 x (5 x bandal tchagui kick + simulated taekwondo match). | Bandal tchagui kick pre-combat 1: EC1 11.9% improvement vs EC2 (0.37 +/- 0.007 vs 0.45 +/- 0.05 s) |
EC experimental condition, NaHCO sodium bicarbonate, SJFT special judo fitness test, CMJ countermovement jump test