Journal Article10.1111/J.1748-1716.1967.TB03720.X
Diet, Muscle Glycogen and Physical Performance
1.7K
TL;DR: It has been shown that the glycogen content and, consequently, the long-term work capacity can be appreciably varied by instituting different diets after glycogen depletion.
read more
Abstract: The muscle glycogen content of the quadriceps femoris muscle was determined in 9 healthy subjects with the aid of the needle biopsy technique. The glycogen content could be varied in the individual subjects by instituting different diets after exhaustion of the glycogen store by hard exercise. Thus, the glycogen content after a fat ± protein (P) and a carbohydrate-rich (C) diet varied maximally from 0.6 g/100g muscle to 4.7 g. In all subjects, the glycogen content after the C diet was higher than the normal range for muscle glycogen, determined after the mixed (M) diet. After each diet period, the subjects worked on a bicycle ergometer at a work load corresponding to 75 per cent of their maximal O2 uptake, to complete exhaustion. The average work time was 59, 126 and 189 min after diets P, M and C, and a good correlation was noted between work time and the initial muscle glycogen content. The total carbohydrate utilization during the work periods (54–798 g) was well correlated to the decrease in glycogen content. It is therefore concluded that the glycogen content of the working muscle is a determinant for the capacity to perform long-term heavy exercise. Moreover, it has been shown that the glycogen content and, consequently, the long-term work capacity can be appreciably varied by instituting different diets after glycogen depletion.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
"Food First but Not Always Food Only": Recommendations for Using Dietary Supplements in Sport.
TL;DR: It is proposed that food first should mean "where practically possible, nutrient provision should come from whole foods and drinks rather than from isolated food components or dietary supplements."
Capsiate, a nonpungent capsaicin analog, increases endurance swimming capacity of mice by stimulation of vanilloid receptors.
Satoshi Haramizu,Wataru Mizunoya,Yoriko Masuda,Koichiro Ohnuki,Tatsuo Watanabe,Susumu Yazawa,Tohru Fushiki +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that the oral administration of capsiate enhanced fat oxidation and spared carbohydrate utilization, and consequently increased the endurance swimming capacity of the mice via stimulation of their vanilloid receptors.
Increased fat availability enhances the capacity of trained individuals to perform prolonged exercise.
TL;DR: It is suggested that increasing fat availability immediately before exercise by acute fat feeding and heparin infusion can improve endurance exercise in a cool environment in well-trained individuals.
48
Dietary carbohydrate and intensity of interval swim training.
TL;DR: When mean +/- SEM daily caloric intake is 19.56 +/- 2.16 MJ (4675 +/- 516 kcal) for swimmers undertaking swim training to develop aerobic capacity, an 80% CHO diet provides no advantage over a 43%CHO diet for maintaining interval-swim-training intensity.
48
Carbohydrate and fat in energy metabolism of red and white muscle
SV Pande,M.C. Blanchaer +1 more
TL;DR: White muscle, and to some extent red muscle, appears potentially capable of deriving more usable energy by oxidizing carbohydrate than fat, and this correlates with the known observations that in vigorously exercising muscle carbohydrate utilization predominates over that of fat.
47
References
Muscle Glycogen Synthesis after Exercise : an Enhancing Factor localized to the Muscle Cells in Man
Jonas Bergström,Eric Hultman +1 more
TL;DR: Goldstein1 has shown that a humoral factor, which decreases the blood glucose concentration, is released during exercise and it is known that the insulin requirement decreases in diabetic subjects during exercise.
510
A Study of the Glycogen Metabolism during Exercise in Man
J Bergström,E Hultman +1 more
TL;DR: The glycogen content of the quadriceps femoris muscle was determined in needle biopsy specimens taken from normal subjects in connexion with muscular work and the carbohydrate metabolism of the liver was studied before and during periods of exercise.
470
A methodological study of the enzymatic determination of glucose in blood.
M. Hjelm,C.-H. De Verdier +1 more
TL;DR: A method has been constructed which gives accurate glucose values in whole blood, plasma, and red blood cells which is based on the glucose oxidase method for determination of glucose.
201