| Literature DB >> 33203106 |
Madalyn Riley Higgins1, Azimeh Izadi2, Mojtaba Kaviani1.
Abstract
Antioxidant supplementation, including vitamin E and C supplementation, has recently received recognition among athletes as a possible method for enhancing athletic performance. Increased oxidative stress during exercise results in the production of free radicals, which leads to muscle damage, fatigue, and impaired performance. Despite their negative effects on performance, free radicals may act as signaling molecules enhancing protection against greater physical stress. Current evidence suggests that antioxidant supplementation may impair these adaptations. Apart from athletes training at altitude and those looking for an immediate, short-term performance enhancement, supplementation with vitamin E does not appear to be beneficial. Moreover, the effectiveness of vitamin E and C alone and/or combined on muscle mass and strength have been inconsistent. Given that antioxidant supplements (e.g., vitamin E and C) tend to block anabolic signaling pathways, and thus, impair adaptations to resistance training, special caution should be taken with these supplements. It is recommended that athletes consume a diet rich in fruits and vegetables, which provides vitamins, minerals phytochemicals, and other bioactive compounds to meet the recommended intakes of vitamin E and C.Entities:
Keywords: altitude training; dietary supplements; free radicals; resistance exercise; sport performance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33203106 PMCID: PMC7697466 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17228452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Vitamin C acting as a reducing agent to recycle vitamin E to protect against lipid peroxidation.
Effects of vitamin E supplementation, with or without vitamin C, on exercise performance.
| Study | Participants | Exercise | Timing | Supplementation | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Morrison et al. 2015 [ | Healthy, young men (n = 11) | Ten, 4 min intervals at 90% VO2 peak interspersed by 2 min active rest at 50 W | Once per day for 4 weeks | Vitamin C (2 × 500 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) |
VO2 peak and |
| Paulsen et al. 2014 [ | Recreationally strength trained men (n = 21) and women (n = 11) | 4 × 10 RM leg press and knee extension with 1 min rest between sets and 3 min rest between exercises | 1–3 h before training and 1 h following training | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (235 mg/day) (placebo added) | Supplementation did not blunt muscle hypertrophy, but measurements of muscle strength were lower following supplementation |
| Ristow et al. 2009 [ | Previously untrained (n = 19) and pretrained (n = 20) healthy, young males | Four-week physical exercise intervention | Once per day for 4 weeks | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) | Exercise increased parameters of insulin sensitivity in both groups only in absence of antioxidants |
| de Oliveira et al. 2019 [ | Football athletes (n = 21) | A protocol consisting of plyometric jumping and strength resistance sets to exhaustion | After 7 days of supplementation, athletes were submitted to training protocol | vitamin C (500 mg/d) and E (400 UI/d) for 15 days | Although antioxidant supplementation reduced oxidative stress, it did not attenuate elevated markers of muscle damage or muscle soreness do not exert any ergogenic effect on football performance |
| Paulsen et al. 2014 [ | Recreationally endurance trained (n = 45) and untrained (n = 14) men and women | VO2 max treadmill test at 5.3% elevation, and 20 shuttle run beep test | 1–3 h before every training session and 1 h after on training days, and in the morning and evening on non-training days | Ascorbic acid (1000 mg/day) and DL α-tocopherol acetate (235 mg/day) (placebo added) | VO2 max and shuttle test performance was increased in both groups |
| Akova et al. 2001 [ | Sedentary, healthy women (n = 18) | Submaximal cycling (50%) followed by maximal concentric-eccentric combined contractions to measure maximal work force of the dominant knee | Once per day across the duration of two menstrual cycles | Alpha-tocopherol (300 mg/day) (placebo added) | No effect of vitamin E on muscle performance |
| Zoppi et al. 2006 [ | Young male soccer players (n = 5) | Lactate maximum speed protocol, one rep max two-legged knee extension, and a 30 m maximal sprint test | Four equal doses every day for 90 days | Ascorbic acid (1000 mg/day) and α-tocopherol (800 mg/day) (placebo added) | No effect on aerobic capacity, strength, or speed |
| Yfanti et al. 2010 [ | Healthy, physically active males (n = 21) | Incremental exercise test on a cadence-independent cycle ergometer for VO2 max and Pmax | Once per day at breakfast for 4 weeks prior to training then for 12 weeks during cycling training | Vitamin C (500 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) (placebo added) | No effect on Pmax or VO2 max |
| Bjørnsen et al. 2016 [ | Elderly men (n = 34) | One repetition max (1 RM) leg extension | 500 mg vitamin C and 117.5 mg vitamin E before and after training 3 times per week for 3 weeks | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (235 mg/day) | Supplementation blunted muscular some adaptations (lean mass gains) |
| Bobeuf et al. 2011 [ | Sedentary older men (n = 27) and women (n = 30) | Resistance training 3 days per week for 6 months | Daily for 6 months | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) | No effect on strength gains |
| Chou et al. 2018 [ | Elite male taekwondo (TKD) athletes (n = 18) | Four TKD matches against weight matched competitors | Twice daily 3 days before and the day of competition | Vitamin C (2000 mg/day) and vitamin E (1400 IU/day) | Supplementation attenuated circulating creatine kinase and myoglobin. Antioxidant supplementation suppressed exercise provided RBC hemolysis and systemic inflammation |
| Cumming et al. 2017 [ | Physically active male (n = 18) and female (n = 10) | A 4x10 RM leg press and knee extension with 1 min rest between sets and 3 min rest between exercises | Two pills 1–3 h before training and 2 pills in the first hour after training | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (235 mg/day) | No effect on acute stress responses |
| Yfanti et al. 2017 [ | Healthy men (n = 16) | Isometric knee extensor peak at 90° knee flexion | Once per day at breakfast for 5 weeks prior to training and for 4 weeks during eccentric exercise training | Vitamin C (1 g/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) (placebo added) | Peak torque increased in both groups with no significant difference between groups |
| Theodorou et al. 2011 [ | Recreationally trained healthy men (n = 28) | Five sets of 15 eccentric maximal contractions with each leg on an isokinetic dynamometer | Once daily for 11 weeks at breakfast | Vitamin C (1 g/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) (placebo added) | No significant supplement and time effect on muscle function, redox status, or hemolysis observed |
| Shafat et al. 2004 [ | Moderately active males (n = 12) | Thirty sets of 10 eccentric knee extensions | Once per day for 37 days | Vitamin C (500 mg/day) and vitamin E (1200 IU/day) | Supplementation reduced the deficit in muscle function experienced during and after bouts of eccentric muscle contractions |
| Nalbant et al. 2009 [ | Older adults (n = 57) | three sessions of walking exercise per week | Six months | Vitamin E (900 IU/day) | Exercise alone or combined with vitamin E supplementation improved 6-min walk, chair stand, arm curl tests. |
| Yfanti et al. 2010 [ | Moderately trained young men (n = 21) | VO2 max cadence dependent cycle test | Daily supplementation for 16 weeks | Vitamin C (500 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) | No effect on VO2 max or maximum power output |
| Yfanti et al. 2012 [ | Healthy, physically active males (n = 21) | One hour at 65% max power on a cycle ergometer | Once per day at breakfast for 16 weeks | Vitamin C (500 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) (placebo added) | Supplementation does not further decrease interlukin-6 levels following endurance training |
| He et al. 2015 [ | Moderately trained males (n = 22) | 40 min downhill run at 65–70% VO2 max | Daily for 2 weeks | Vitamin C (1000 mg/day) and vitamin E (400 IU/day) | Supplementation enhanced repeated bout effect as evidenced by attenuation of biomarkers of muscle damage and greater antioxidant capacity |
| Santos et al. 2018 [ | Healthy, physically active males (n = 9) | VO2 max treadmill test to exhaustion under normal conditions and hypoxia conditions | One hour before exercise | Vitamin E (250 mg) | A reduction was seen in creatine kinase (CK) and lactate dehydrogenase levels. |
| Wyckelsma et al. 2020 [ | Recreationally active elderly (mean age 65, n = 18) | nine sessions (three sessions/week for 3 weeks) | On the training days, tablets were taken at least 1 h before the training session | vitamin C (1 g daily) and vitamin E (235 mg daily), treatments were initiated 7 days before the first sprint interval training (SIT) session | Supplementation with antioxidants vitamin C and E blunts SIT-induced cellular signaling in skeletal muscle of elderly individuals |
Effects of vitamin E supplementation, with or without vitamin C, on exercise performance and oxidative stress markers in animals.
| Study | Participants | Exercise | Supplementation | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hoene et al. 2018 [ | Male mice | One hour of treadmill running | Diet supplemented with 100 mg/kg vitamin C and 2000 IU/kg vitamin E (as _-tocopheryl acetate) for 4 weeks | The increase in circulatory free fatty acids 1-h post exercise was blunted vitamin E. Upregulation of several exercise-responsive transcripts was attenuated by vitamin E. |
| Górnicka et al. 2019 [ | Male Wistar rats | Fifteen minutes of treadmill running/day | Two mg/day of vitamin E as α-tocopherol acetate for 14 days | Vitamin E supplementation significantly reduced thiobarbituric acid reactive substance (TBARS) in the muscles and heart. |
| Lee et al. 2009 [ | Male Wistar rats | Forced swimming 10 h after the last treatment | 25 or 50 mg/kg of tocotrienol-rich fraction (TRF), or 25 mg/kg D-α-tocopherol (T-25) for 28 days | TRF improved endurance capacity indicated by longer duration of swimming and reduce the exercise-induced oxidative stress. |
| Strobel et al. 2011 [ | Male Wistar rats | Treadmill running 4 days/week for 14 weeks | Vitamin E (1000 mg/kg) and α-lipoic acid (1.6 g/kg) fortified feed | No effect on the changes of exercise induced markers of mitochondrial biogenesis and mitochondrial proteins |
| Venditti et al. 2014 [ | Male Wistar rats | Swimming 5 days/week for 10 weeks | Vitamin E (700 mg/kg) fortified food | Vitamin E supplementation attenuated training induced declines in mitochondrial respiration. |
| Coombes et al. 2001 [ | Antiox rats | A fatigue protocol (30 min) | 10,000 IU vitamin E/kg diet and 1.65 g/kg and α-lipoic acid for 8 weeks | A decline in skeletal muscle force production at low stimulation frequencies |
| Ryan et al. 2010 [ | Young and aged | Three times weekly for 4.5 weeks using 80 maximal stretch–shortening contractions per session | Diet supplemented with Vitamin E (DL-alpha tocopheryl acetate; 30,000 mg/kg) and Vitamin C (Lascorbic acid; 2% by weight) | Supplementing with vitamin E and C reduced oxidative damage markers (e.g., malondialdehyde) associated with aging. |
| Kyparos et al. 2011 [ | Male Wistar rats | 90 min of | Vitamin E was administered by daily intraperitoneal | Vitamin E supplementation resulted in a higher soleus muscle single-twitch tension immediately post-exercise compared to the placebo condition. |
| Al-Hashem 2012 [ | Male rats | Acute forced exhaustive swimming | A single dose of 25 mg/kg of vitamin E and 20 mg/kg of vitamin C 1 h before the experimental procedure | Co-ingestion of vitamin E and C |
| Picklo et al. 2015 [ | Male obese rats | Running 5days/week for 12 weeks on a motorized wheel | Dietary supplementation with vitamin E (0.4 g α-tocopherol acetate/kg) and vitamin C (0.5 g/kg) during a high fat diet | No difference in insulin area under curve was found between the conditions. Exercise combined with vitamin C and vitamin E resulted in a higher mitochondrial DNA content versus exercise alone or high fat diet alone conditions. |
| Goswami and Ghosh. 2019 [ | Male Albino rats | The rats were | Two equal daily doses of vitamin E (first half of the total dose, i.e., 10, 20, and | Vitamin E in a dose-dependent manner blocked some of the immune changes such as, phagocytic activity of white blood cell, cytotoxic activity of splenic mononuclear cell. Also, corticosterone levels was reduced by vitamin E. |
| Fagan et al. 2020 [ | horses | Six-week conditioning program | Horses divided to three groups and fed the control diet plus (1) 1000 IU/day synthetic α [ | Vitamin E improved some oxidative and inflammatory |
Effects of vitamin C supplementation on exercise performance outcomes.
| Study | Participants | Exercise | Timing | Supplementation | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gomez-Cabrera et al. 2008 [ | Human (15 men) and male Wistar rats | For humans: Static bicycle on 3 days/week for 8 weeks; for animals 5 days/week on an animal treadmill | For 8 weeks | For humans: 1 g/day vitamin C and for rats 0.24 mg/cm2 body surface area | Vitamin C reduced factors are PGC-1, nuclear respiratory factor 1, and mitochondrial transcription factor A. The exercise-induced expression of cytochrome C, SD, and glutathione peroxidase were blocked by vitamin C. |
| Roberts et al. 2011 [ | Recreationally active males (n = 15) | high-intensity interval running protocol, 4 times per week | For 4 weeks | 1 g/day | Training-induced improvements of VO2max, 10 km time trial, and running economy were not affected by vitamin C. |
| Evans et al. 2017 [ | Nine persons naive to resistance exercise (RE) | One RE bout was performed pre-supplementation and one was performed post-supplementation; RE bouts consisted of a warmup set of bodyweight pushups, three working sets (WS) of 10 isokinetic contracting push-pull repetitions, and one maximal effort set (ME) of five isokinetic contracting push-pull repetitions | For 28 days | 250 mg every 12 h | Vitamin C supplementation increased peak muscular pushing force (PMF) and reduced exercise-induced oxidative stress. |
| Paschalis et al. 2016 [ | recreationally trained healthy males (n = 20) | aerobic exercise to exhaustion | For 30 days | three vitamin C tablets/day (each tablet contained 333 mg of vitamin C) | The low vitamin C group had lower VO2 max values than the high vitamin C group. Vitamin C supplementation in this group marginally increased VO2 max. |
| Thompson et al. 2001 [ | Active men (n = 16) | Aerobic: A prolonged intermittent shuttle-running test for 90 min | For 14 days | 400 mg/day | Vitamin C supplementation had modest beneficial effects on muscle soreness and muscle function |
| Bryer and Goldfarb 2006 [ | healthy men (n = 18) | Seventy eccentric elbow extensions with their non-dominant arm | for 2 weeks prior and 4 days after eccentric exercise | 3 g/day | Vitamin C reduced muscle soreness and delayed CK increase. Muscle force and range of motion were not affected. |
| close et al. 2006 [ | Physically active male subjects (n = 20) | Aerobic: Downhill running | For 2 h pre-, and for 14 days after exercise | 1 g/day | Vitamin C attenuated RONS production following downhill running. No effect on DOMS was seen. |
| Connolly et al. 2006 [ | 24 subjects (male and female) | Anaerobic: 40 (2 × 20) | For 8 days (3 days prior to an exercise bouts and 5 days after) | 3 g/day | Vitamin C had no effect on muscle soreness and muscle strength |
| Scalzo et al. 2018 [ | Adults with T2D (n = 31) and healthy adults (n = 21) | Peak oxygen uptake was determined via graded exercise to exhaustion | Single dose | IV infusion of vitamin C (7.5 g) | Acute vitamin C infusion did not change VO2 peak |