| Literature DB >> 30671906 |
Joanna Bowtell1, Vincent Kelly2,3.
Abstract
Polyphenols are characterised structurally by two or more hydroxyl groups attached to one or more benzene rings, and provide the taste and colour characteristics of fruits and vegetables. They are radical scavengers and metal chelators, but due to their low concentration in biological fluids in vivo their antioxidant properties seem to be related to enhanced endogenous antioxidant capacity induced via signalling through the Nrf2 pathway. Polyphenols also seem to possess anti-inflammatory properties and have been shown to enhance vascular function via nitric oxide-mediated mechanisms. As a consequence, there is a rationale for supplementation with fruit-derived polyphenols both to enhance exercise performance, since excess reactive oxygen species generation has been implicated in fatigue development, and to enhance recovery from muscle damage induced by intensive exercise due to the involvement of inflammation and oxidative damage within muscle. Current evidence would suggest that acute supplementation with ~ 300 mg polyphenols 1-2 h prior to exercise may enhance exercise capacity and/or performance during endurance and repeated sprint exercise via antioxidant and vascular mechanisms. However, only a small number of studies have been performed to date, some with methodological limitations, and more research is needed to confirm these findings. A larger body of evidence suggests that supplementation with > 1000 mg polyphenols per day for 3 or more days prior to and following exercise will enhance recovery following muscle damage via antioxidant and anti-inflammatory mechanisms. The many remaining unanswered questions within the field of polyphenol research and exercise performance and recovery are highlighted within this review article.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30671906 PMCID: PMC6445811 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-018-0998-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Dietary sources of the different polyphenol families and sub-families
| Polyphenol family | Example compounds | Dietary source |
|---|---|---|
| Stilbenes | Resveratrol | Grapes |
| Lignans | Enterodiol | Seeds, whole grains, legumes |
| Phenolic acids | Cinnamic | Caffeic acid–coffee |
| Flavonoids | Epicatechin, | Cocoa |
Effects of acute polyphenol supplementation on exercise performance
| References | Participant characteristics | Supplementation protocol | Performance task | Effects of polyphenol supplementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cases et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 290 mg PP from green tea, grape and pomegranate | 4 × 30 s all-out cycle sprints with 4-5 min inter-sprint recovery | ↑ Peak and average power output |
| Crum et al. [ | Trained cyclists ( | 1000 mg pomegranate extract 2.5 h pre-ex (low PP diet consumed) | Time to exhaustion at 100% | = Time to exhaustion |
| Roelofs et al. [ | Recreationally resistance trained | 1000 mg pomegranate extract | 10 × 6 s cycle sprints 30 s recovery | = Average and peak power (CI revealed higher peak s5 and 7 and average s5 power) |
| Trexler et al. [ | Recreationally active ( | 1000 mg pomegranate extract | Treadmill runs to exhaustion at 90, 100, 110% | ↑ Time to exhaustion at 90% and 100% PV |
| Decroix et al. [ | Trained male cyclists ( | 900 mg cocoa flavanols | Two cycling time trial (equivalent of 30 min @ 75% peak power output) with 100 min passive recovery | = Time trial performance (+ve trend for TT1, |
| Deley et al. [ | Recreationally active men | 500 mg PP from grape and apple ( | Time to exhaustion at 70% maximum cycling aerobic power | ↑ Time to exhaustion (9.7%) |
| Oh et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 72 mg PP from Ecklonia cava | Incremental maximum treadmill test | ↑ Time to exhaustion |
| Keane et al. [ | Trained cyclists ( | 60 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (PP dose not provided) | 6 min moderate and 6 min severe intensity cycling continued to exhaustion and on other occasion followed by an all-out 60 s sprint | = Time to exhaustion |
↑ Increased, ↓ decreased, = no change, CI confidence interval, IL interleukin, PP polyphenol, PV peak velocity, RCT randomised controlled trial with parallel groups, RM repetition maximum, SOD superoxide dismutase, TNF tumour necrosis factor, TT time trial, maximum rate of oxygen consumption
Effects of chronic polyphenol supplementation on exercise performance
| References | Participant characteristics | Supplementation protocol | Performance task | Effects of polyphenol supplementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braakhuis et al. [ | Trained female runners ( | Vitamin C (0.5 g), blackcurrant (7.5 mg vitamin C and 150 mg anthocyanins), placebo | 3-week blocks of intensified training | = Performance (possible benefit of blackcurrant for faster runners) |
| Cook et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 300 mg blackcurrant per day (105 mg anthocyanins) for 7 days | 16.1 km cycling time trial after 30 min steady state cycling | ↑ Time trial performance (2.4%) |
| Godwin et al. [ | Recreationally active University players ( | 300 mg blackcurrant per day (105 mg anthocyanins) for 7 days | 6 × 35 m sprints interspersed with 10 s passive recovery | Trend for improved fatigue index (~ 12%, |
| Murphy et al. [ | Trained male cyclists ( | 300 mg blackcurrant per day (105 mg anthocyanins) for 7 days | 2 × 4 km time trials interspersed with 10 min active recovery | ↑ Performance (0.8%) |
| Perkins et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 300 mg blackcurrant per day (105 mg anthocyanins) for 7 days | High intensity intermittent treadmill running to exhaustion (stages of sprints 6 × 19 s and 15 s low intensity running) | ↑ Running distance (~ 10%) |
| Willems et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 300 mg blackcurrant per day (105 mg anthocyanins) for 7 days | Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test | = Time to exhaustion |
| Allgrove et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 40 g dark chocolate (54 mg catechins and 44 mg flavanols) twice per day for 2 weeks (last dose 2 h pre-ex) (low PP diet consumed 48 h pre-ex) | Pre-load: 60% | = Time to exhaustion |
| Kang et al. [ | Recreationally active | 100 mg oligomerized lychee extract ( | Time to exhaustion treadmill running at 80% HRmax | ↑ Time to exhaustion |
| Richards et al. [ | Recreationally active ( | 135 mg epigallocatechin | Incremental maximum cycle exercise test | ↑ |
| Sadowska-Krepa et al. [ | Recreationally active | 73 mg PP from 390 mg red grape skin extract ( | 6 × 50 m swimming time trials | ↑ Performance (faster speed, = heart rate) |
| Trinity et al. [ | Trained male cyclists | 500 ml pomegranate or placebo × 2 per day for 7 days (~ 1800 mg PP per day) | 10 min cycling time trial after 50 min pre-load time to exhaustion at | = Time trial performance |
↑ Increased, ↓ decreased, = no change, CAT catalase, ex exercise, HR heart rate, HRmax maximal heart rate, PC protein carbonyls, PP polyphenol, RCT randomised controlled trial with parallel groups, RPE rating of perceived exertion, SOD superoxide dismutase, SS steady state, Omax maximum rate of oxygen consumption
Effects of fruit-derived polyphenol supplementation on recovery from exercise-induced muscle damage
| References | Participant characteristics | Supplementation protocol | Muscle damage protocol | Effects of polyphenol supplementation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Beals et al. [ | Recreationally active | 30 g tart cherry powder ( | Maximal effort unilateral isokinetic concentric/eccentric knee extensor contractions of at 60o·s−1 until 50% drop in force | = Isometric knee extensor muscle force |
| Bell et al. [ | Trained cyclists RCT | 30 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (600 mg PP, 254 mg anthocyanins) ( | High-intensity stochastic cycling exercise (109 min) | ↓ Plasma biomarkers of inflammation (IL6 and CRP) |
| Bell et al. [ | Trained cyclists RCT | 30 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (600 mg PP, 254 mg anthocyanins) ( | High intensity stochastic cycling exercise (109 min) | ↑ isometric knee extensor muscle force, cycling economy |
| Bell et al. [ | Semi-professional male soccer players RCT | 30 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (600 mg PP, 254 mg anthocyanins) ( | Loughborough Intermittent Shuttle Test | ↑ Isometric knee extensor muscle force, countermovement jump height, and agility |
| Bowtell et al. [ | Trained high intensity intermittent sport athletes ( | 30 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (600 mg PP, 254 mg anthocyanins) × 2 per day for 10 days | 10 sets of 10 unilateral knee extension repetitions @ 80% 1RM | ↑ Isometric knee extensor muscle force |
| Connolly et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 12 oz bottles Montmorency cherry concentrate in apple juice (600 mg PP, incl 40 mg anthocyanins) × 2 per day for 8 days | 2 × 20 maximum unilateral eccentric elbow flexor contractions | ↑ Isometric elbow flexor muscle force |
| Howatson et al. [ | Recreational marathon runners ( | 8 oz bottles Montmorency cherry juice (600 mg PP, incl 40 mg anthocyanins) ( | Marathon | ↑ Isometric knee extensor muscle force |
| Kuehl et al. [ | Recreational runners RCT | 10.5 oz Montmorency cherry juice (600 mg PP, incl 40 mg anthocyanins) ( | Hood to Coast relay race | ↓ Muscle soreness |
| Levers et al. [ | Resistance trained men | 480 mg Montmorency cherry powder ( | 10 sets of 10 repetitions @ 70% 1RM barbell back squats | = Isometric knee extensor muscle force |
| Machin et al. [ | Recreationally active men RCT | 30 ml pomegranate concentrate (650 mg PP, 620 mg ellagitanins) × 1 ( | 3 × 20 maximum unilateral eccentric elbow flexor contractions | ↑ Isometric elbow flexor and knee extensor strength |
| McCormick et al. [ | Trained waterpolo players ( | 30 ml Montmorency cherry concentrate (600 mg PP, 254 mg anthocyanins) × 3 per day for 7 days | Fatiguing simulated water polo team activity | = Performance waterpolo specific tasks |
| Trombold et al. [ | Recreationally active men ( | 500 ml pomegranate juice (650 mg PP, 620 mg ellagitanins) × 2 per day for 9 days | 2 × 20 maximum eccentric elbow flexor contractions | ↑ Isometric strength |
| Trombold et al. [ | Resistance trained men ( | 250 ml pomegranate juice (495 mg tannins, 96 mg anthocyanins, 30 mg ellagic acid derivatives) × 2 per day for 15 days | 3 × 20 maximum unilateral eccentric elbow flexor contractions | ↑ Isometric elbow flexor strength |
| Hutchison et al. [ | Untrained RCT | 12 oz blackcurrant juice (369 mg anthocyanins) ( | 3 × 10 repeitions @ 115%1RM eccentric back squats | = Muscle soreness |
| Ives et al. [ | Recreationally active men RCT | Carbohydrate ( | 100 maximal eccentric knee extensor contractions | ↑ Knee extensor strength |
| McLeay et al. [ | Recreationally active women ( | 200 g blueberry in test beverage (~ 420 mg PP, 242 mg anthocyanins) consumed × 3 on day of exercise and × 1 am d1 and d2 post-ex | 3 × 100 unilateral maximum knee extensor eccentric contractions | ↑ Knee extensor strength |
| Peschek et al. [ | Endurance trained ( | Chocolate milk (1 g·kg−1 CHO, 0.3 g·kg−1 protein, 350 mg cocoa flavanols) versus chocolate milk with no cocoa flavanols; consumed 1 and 2 h post-ex | 30 min downhill running | = Knee extensor muscle strength and 5 km time trial |
| Romain et al. [ | Recreationally active ( | 1.5 g.d−1 extract from mangosteen, black elderberry and pomegranate (219 mg PP, 130 mg ellagic acid and derivatives, 85 × anthone derivatives) | 8 × 8RM half squats | ↓ Muscle soreness |
↑ Increased, ↓ decreased, = no change, CHO carbohydrate, CRP C reactive protein, CK creatine kinase, IL6 interleukin 6, ex exercise, incl including, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, Mb myoglobin, PC protein carbonyls, PP polyphenol, RCT randomised controlled trial with parallel groups, RM repetition maximum, TBARS thiobarbituric acid reactive substances
| Fruit-derived polyphenols have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties and so can enhance exercise performance, since excess reactive oxygen species generation has been implicated in fatigue development, and enhance recovery from intensive exercise due to the involvement of inflammation and oxidative damage within muscle. |
| Consumption of ~ 300 mg polyphenols an hour prior to exercise may enhance endurance and repeated sprint performance, most likely due to improved muscle perfusion. |
| Supplementation with > 1000 mg polyphenols per day for 3 or more days prior to and following exercise will enhance recovery from exercise-induced muscle damage. |