| Literature DB >> 32460873 |
A J Braakhuis1, V X Somerville2, R D Hurst3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Blackcurrants have come to be regarded as a superfood because of their high polyphenol content, namely anthocyanins. While many berry types have been studied, blackcurrant-anthocyanins may be the superior berry when it comes to athletic performance. The purpose of the review was to evaluate the effects of blackcurrant supplementation on athletic performance, oxidative markers, cognition, and side effects.Entities:
Keywords: Anthocyanin; Athlete; Berry; Exercise
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32460873 PMCID: PMC7251677 DOI: 10.1186/s12970-020-00354-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Fig. 1PRISMA chart outlining identification of included studies
Fig. 2Forest plot of performance effects of NZ BC compared to placebo. Results are expressed as standardized mean differences, and 95% confidence intervals (CI)
Fig. 3Scatter plot of the studies that investigated oxidative stress markers before and after exercise, expressed as a post-:pre-exercise ratio. The horizontal dotted line represents no change compared with baseline. The solid horizontal line represents the geometric mean. MDA, malondialdehyde; PC, protein carbonyl
Details of blackcurrant studies included in the performance meta-analysis
| Study | Subjects; design | BC anthocyanin dose | Final dose | Performance Protocol |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Braakhuis, 2014 [ | 23 females (active); crossover | 300 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 3-wk | 2–3 h before test | Run time during a 5 km run time trial (25 min) |
| Cook, 2015 [ | 14 males (active); crossover | 105 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 2 h before test | Cycle time during a 16.1 km cycle time trial (28 min) |
| Godwin, 2017 [ | 24 males (active); crossover | 210 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 2 h before test | Sprint time during a repeated run sprint interval test to fatigue (average of sprint 3–6, 22 s) |
| Murphy, 2017 [ | 10 males (active); crossover | 105 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 2 h before test | Cycle time during a twice repeated 4-km cycle time trial (12 min) |
| Perkins, 2015 [ | 13 males (active); crossover | 105 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 3 h before test | Distance covered during a repeated sprint test to fatigue (4 km) |
| Perkins, 2019 [ | 16 males (active); crossover | 210 mg.d−1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | Not reported | Distance covered during a repeated sprint test to fatigue (4.7 km) |
| Potter, 2020 [ | 18 males, 2 females (active); crossover | 210 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | Not reported | Hang time during a simulated rock climbing test to fatigue (30 s) |
| Willems, 2015 [ | 8 males, 5 females (active); crossover | 138.6 mg.d−1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 2–3 h before test | Power output at set lactate level during a cycle test (225 watts) |
| Willems, 2016 [ | 13 males (active); crossover | 105 mg.d− 1 BC anthocyanins for 7-d | 3 h before test | Run time during a run test to fatigue following a sprint test (14 min) |
Key: aBC=Blackcurrant
Details of blackcurrant studies included which report oxidative, inflammatory, and cognitive outcomes
| Study | Subjects; design | BC anthocyanin dose | Final dose | Outcomes measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hurst, 2019 [ | 32 males and females; parallel design | 0.8, 1.6, or 3.2 mg.kg− 1 body weight BC extract (34% anthocyanins) (8 individuals per group). ~ 20, 40 and 80 mg BC anthocyanins consumed acutely | 1 h before test | Oxidative measures (FRAP, PC) |
| Hurst, 2019 [ | 20 males and females; parallel design | 3.2 mg.kg− 1 body weight BC extract (34% anthocyanins).d− 1 for 5-wk. ~ 80 mg BC anthocyanins daily. | 2 h before test | Oxidative measures (MDA, FRAP, IL-6, IL-10, TNFα) |
| Lomiwes, 2019 [ | 15 males and 25 females; parallel design | 4.8 mg.kg− 1 body weight BC concentrate diluted in water (200 mL) prepared and onsumed acutely. ~ 120 mg BC anthocyanins. | 1 h before test | Cognitive measures (MAO-B). Oxidative measures (MDA) |
| Lyall, 2009 [ | 5 males and 5 females; crossover | 240 mg BC anthocyanins consumed acutely | 30-min before test | Oxidative measures (PC), Side effects |
| McGhie, 2007 [ | 20 male and female older adults in control and blackcurrant arm; parallel design | 500 mg BC anthocyanins daily for 24 weeks from BC extract and concentrate diluted in water (200 mL) | Not reported | Oxidative measures (PC, MDA) |
| Watson, 2015 [ | 36 males and females, 3-arm; crossover | ~ 500 mg.60 kg− 1 body weight BC anthocyanins extract; OR ~ 400 mg.60 kg− 1 body weight BC anthocyanins juice, consumed acutely | 1 h before test | Cognitive measures (MAO-B, Stroop test, Digit Divigilance test) |
| Watson, 2018 [ | 8 males; crossover | ~ 6.2 mg.kg− 1 body weight BC anthocyanins juice, consumed acutely | Not reported | Cognitive measures (MAO-B) |
Key: a BC=Blackcurrant; b FRAP=Ferric reducing ability of plasma, PC=Protein carbonyl, MDA = Malondialdehyde, MAO-B=Platelet monoamine oxidase-B activity