| Literature DB >> 32722588 |
Alejandro F San Juan1, Raul Dominguez2, Ángel Lago-Rodríguez2, Juan José Montoya3, Rachel Tan4, Stephen J Bailey5.
Abstract
Dietary nitrate (NO3-) supplementation has been evidenced to induce an ergogenic effect in endurance and sprint-type exercise, which may be underpinned by enhanced muscle contractility and perfusion, particularly in type II muscle fibers. However, limited data are available to evaluate the ergogenic potential of NO3- supplementation during other exercise modalities that mandate type II fiber recruitment, such as weightlifting exercise (i.e., resistance exercise). In this systematic review, we examine the existing evidence basis for NO3- supplementation to improve muscular power, velocity of contraction, and muscular endurance during weightlifting exercise in healthy adults. We also discuss the potential mechanistic bases for any positive effects of NO3- supplementation on resistance exercise performance. Dialnet, Directory of Open Access Journals, Medline, Pubmed, Scielo, Scopus and SPORT Discus databases were searched for articles using the keywords: nitrate or beetroot and supplement or nut*r or diet and strength or "resistance exercise" or "resistance training" or "muscular power". Four articles fulfilling the inclusion criteria were identified. Two of the four studies indicated that NO3- supplementation could increase aspects of upper body weightlifting exercise (i.e., bench press) performance (increases in mean power/velocity of contraction/number of repetitions to failure), whereas another study observed an increase in the number of repetitions to failure during lower limb weightlifting exercise (i.e., back squat). Although these preliminary observations are encouraging, further research is required for the ergogenic potential of NO3- supplementation on weightlifting exercise performance to be determined.Entities:
Keywords: beetroot; ergogenic aid; exercise; muscle; nutrition
Year: 2020 PMID: 32722588 PMCID: PMC7469052 DOI: 10.3390/nu12082227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis (PRISMA) flowchart.
Studies assessing the effects of dietary NO3− supplementation on resistance exercise performance in humans.
| Reference | Subjects | Supplementation | Exercise Protocol | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flanagan et al. (2016) [ | Fourteen resistance-trained men | Three days and 60 min prior to exercise ingestion of 2 × NO3−-rich bars (32.5 mg NO3−·d−1) | Smith machine box squats: three sets x 3-s isometric squats interspersed with 120-s rest, then dynamic box squats @ 60%1RM with 10% increases up to 90%1RM, then 10% decreases to 60%1RM, then RTF on last 60%1RM set | ↔ RTF: −1.5% (599 ± 5 vs. 608 ± 5 reps) |
| Mosher et al. (2016) [ | Twelve resistance-trained men | Six days of 1 × 70 mL NO3− rich BR supplementation (~6.4 mmol NO3−·d−1) | Smith machine bench press: three sets of RTF @ 60%1RM interspersed with 2 min of recovery between sets | ↑ RTF: +19.4% |
| Williams et al. (2020) [ | Eleven resistance-trained men | Two hours prior to exercise ingestion of 1 × 70 mL NO3− rich BR (~6.4 mmol NO3−) | Free-weight bench press: two sets x 2 explosive reps, 5 min rest, then three sets x RTF @ 70%1RM interspersed with 2 min of recovery between sets | ↑ RTF: +10.7% (31 ± 6 vs. 28 ± 6 reps) |
| Ranchal-Sanchez et al. (2020) [ | Twelve resistance-trained men | Two hours prior to exercise ingestion of 1 × 70 mL NO3− rich BR (~6.4 mmol NO3−) | Smith machine bench press and back squat: three sets x RTF @ 60−70−80%1RM with 2 min of recovery between sets. After the eccentric phase of each rep, participants rested for 1.0−1.5 s | ↑ RTF back squat: +23.4% (60 ± 20 vs. 46 ± 16 reps) |
↑ = significant increase; ↔ = no change; 1RM = one-repetition maximum; BR = beetroot juice; EMG = surface electromyography; m·s−1 = meters per second; min = minutes; NO3− = nitrate; Pmean = mean power of bench press; reps = repetitions; RTF = repetitions to failure; s = seconds; Vmean = mean velocity of bench press; W = Watts.