|
JOURNAL
OF
SPORTS SCIENCE &
MEDICINE
|
|
Research
article
|
PRE-WORKOUT CARBOHYDRATE SUPPLEMENTATION DOES NOT AFFECT MEASURES OF SELF-ASSESSED VITALITY AND AFFECT IN COLLEGE SWIMMERS |
|||||||||
Kathleen M. Hill1 ,
James R. Whitehead1, and Janice
K. Goodwin2 |
|||||||||
1Department of Physical Education, Exercise Science, and Wellness, and 2Department of Nutrition and Dietetics, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND, USA |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
© Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (2011) 10, 478 - 482 |
|||||||||
|
|
| ABSTRACT | |||||||||||||
| Beneficial effects of dietary carbohydrate (CHO) on physical and
psychological parameters have been demonstrated in athletes. Because affect,
or mood, can predict athletic performace, the main objective of this study
was to determine the effect of pre-workout CHO on affect in swimmers. College
swimmers (n = 37) participated in a randomized crossover experiment of the
effects of a pre-workout CHO supplement on vitality and affect. Subjects
consumed a CHO supplement or placebo for two days before morning practice.
After each morning practice, swimmers completed measures of affect and feelings
of vitality. Pearson correlations were performed to describe relationships
among variables. Differences in means between the CHO and placebo conditions
were determined by paired t-tests. Independent t-tests were used to determine
differences in variables between the highest and lowest tertiles of breakfast
consumption frequency. All statistical analyses were performed using SAS
9.1.3 (Cary, NC) and statistical signficance was set at α = 0.05. There
were no significant differences in affect or feelings of vitality between
the CHO supplement and placebo conditions (all p > 0.15). Our
results do not support a beneficial effect of CHO supplementation before
morning swim practice on affect or feelings of vitality in swimmers. Key words: Nutrition, swimmers, mood. |
|
| INTRODUCTION | |||||||||||||
|
Mood disturbances have been shown to occur in swimmers during
intense training (Morgan et al., 1988;
Raglin, 2001)
and the Mental Health Model of sport performance (Raglin, 2001)
shows that common measures of psychological and mood states identify successful
and unsuccessful athletes. In addition to beneficial effects on physiological
outcomes (Coggan and Coyle, 1991;
Costill et al., 1988),
studies have also shown beneficial effects of CHO on psychological factors
and cognitive functions and performance (Lieberman, 2003).
CHO administration before exercise has been shown to improve vigor and
cognitive performance, and reduce confusion compared to placebo during
exercise (Lieberman et al., 2002).
Drinking CHO solution during prolonged exercise in male cyclists enhanced
feelings of pleasure compared to a water placebo (Backhouse et al., 2005).
Another study in male endurance runners showed that a high CHO diet not
only improved mood, but also exercise performance compared to a lower
CHO diet (Achten et al., 2004).
|
|
| METHODS | |||||||||||||
|
Subjects Dietary
information Anthropometrics Procedure Statistical
analysis |
|
| RESULTS | |||||||||||||
|
Height,
weight, 24-hour dietary recall, and ABQ, and general vitality scale were
completed by 37 swimmers, and 34 swimmers completed at least one day on
each placebo and CHO supplement in the cross-over study. Subject characteristics
and dietary intakes from 24h dietary recalls are shown in Table
1. One swimmer who volunteered for the study missed all components
of the study. Total kcal/d was negatively correlated with the reduced
sense of accomplishment subscale of the ABQ (r = -0.35, p < 0.05).
There were no additional significant correlations between kcal or CHO
intake and the ABQ or general vitality (all p > 0.10). Forty-six percent
(n = 17) of subjects reported never eating breakfast before morning swim
practice. Subjects in the top tertile for breakfast frequency (> 3 d/week,
n = 14) had a higher mean score for the devaluation subscale of the ABQ
compared to subjects in the bottom tertile (0 d/week, n = 17) (3.31 ±
0.90 vs. 2.39 ± 0.92, respectively, p < 0.01). |
|
| DISCUSSION | |||||||||||||
|
The objectives of this study were to determine if relationships
exist between breakfast and dietary habits and athlete burnout and vitality
in swimmers, and to determine if CHO supplementation before morning practice
would have a beneficial effect on post-practice subjective measures of
affect and feelings of vitality. Previous research (Backhouse et al.,
2005)
has shown that CHO supplementation in athletes during exercise has positive
effects on affect in a laboratory setting. This study investigated if
similar results could be found in a field-based study with swimmers. |
|
| AUTHORS BIOGRAPHY | |
Kathleen M. HILL Employment: Postdoctoral research fellow at Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, IN, USA. Degree: BS in Dietetics; MS in Kinesiology; PhD in Nutrition. Research interests: Nutrition for bone health in health and disease. E-mail: katmhill@iupui.edu |
|
James R. WHITEHEAD Employment: Professor of Physical Education Exercise Science and Wellness at the University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND, USA. Degree: BA in Physical Education/Social Science; MS in Physical Education & Exercise Science; EdD in Fitness/Wellness Education. Research interests: Exercise psychology, fitness and wellness, and physical education curriculum. E-mail: james.whitehead@email.und.edu |
|
Janice K. GOODWIN Employment: Associate Professor of Nutrition and Dietetics, University of North Dakota, Grand Forks, ND, USA. Degree: BS Dietetics and Nutrition, MS Dietetics & Nutrition, PhD Nutrition. Research interests: Behavior modification. E-mail: janice.goodwin@und.edu |
|