Sally A. Clark
Australian Institute of Sport
36 Papers
198 Citations
Sally A. Clark is an academic researcher from Australian Institute of Sport. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Na+/K+-ATPase. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 36 publications. Previous affiliations of Sally A. Clark include RMIT University.
Chat about Author
Papers
Daily training with high carbohydrate availability increases exogenous carbohydrate oxidation during endurance cycling
Gregory R. Cox,Sally A. Clark,Amanda J. Cox,Amanda J. Cox,Shona L. Halson,Mark Hargreaves,John A. Hawley,Nikki A. Jeacocke,Rodney J. Snow,Wee Kian Yeo,Louise M. Burke +10 more
TL;DR: Changing total daily carbohydrate intake by providing or withholding carbohydrate during daily training in trained athletes results in differences in selected metabolic adaptations to exercise, including the oxidation of exogenous carbohydrate, but these metabolic changes do not alter the training-induced magnitude of increase in exercise performance.
164
Adaptations to short-term high-fat diet persist during exercise despite high carbohydrate availability.
Louise M. Burke,John A. Hawley,Damien J. Angus,Gregory R. Cox,Sally A. Clark,Nicola K. Cummings,Ben Desbrow,Mark Hargreaves +7 more
TL;DR: Adaptations to a short-term high-fat diet persisted in the face of high CHO availability before and during exercise, but failed to confer a performance advantage during a TT lasting approximately 25 min undertaken after 2 h of submaximal cycling.
149
Regulation of fuel metabolism by preexercise muscle glycogen content and exercise intensity
Melissa J. Arkinstall,Clinton R. Bruce,Sally A. Clark,Caroline A. Rickards,Louise M. Burke,John A. Hawley +5 more
TL;DR: It is concluded that, in moderately trained individuals, muscle glycogen availability (low vs. high) does not influence rates of plasma glucose disposal during either low- or moderate-intensity exercise.
105
Living high-training low increases hypoxic ventilatory response of well-trained endurance athletes
Nathan E. Townsend,Christopher J. Gore,Allan G. Hahn,Michael J. McKenna,Robert J. Aughey,Sally A. Clark,Tahnee A. Kinsman,Tahnee A. Kinsman,John A. Hawley,Chin Moi Chow +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors determined whether living high-training low (LHTL) simulated altitude exposure increased the hypoxic ventilatory response (HVR) in well-trained endurance athletes.
82
Effect of CHO ingestion on exercise metabolism and performance in different ambient temperatures
Mark A. Febbraio,Phillip Murton,Steve E Selig,Sally A. Clark,Donna L. Lambert,Damien J. Angus,Michael Carey +6 more
TL;DR: The data demonstrate that, during prolonged exercise in the heat, fatigue is related to factors other than CHO availability, and during exercise in 5 degrees C a 7% CHO solution is more beneficial for exercise performance than a 14%CHO solution.
73