Title

Nutritional Supplement, Eccentric Exercise and Recovery
A Single Site Double Blind Placebo Controlled Study of the Effects of a Dietary Supplement on Muscle Recovery Following Exercise-Induced Muscle Damage
  • Phase

    Phase 1/Phase 2
  • Study Type

    Interventional
  • Status

    Completed No Results Posted
  • Intervention/Treatment

    creatine ...
  • Study Participants

    42
The objectives of this study are to assess the effectiveness of a nutritional supplement on muscle functional recovery following induced muscle damage from high intensity resistance exercise. The investigators hypothesize that a short-term dietary supplementation will significantly improve muscle functional recovery following an intense bout of eccentric exercise compared to a placebo.
Impaired or incomplete recovery following high intensity exercise can negatively affect physical performance and delay functional progression, thereby reducing an athlete's chance of performing at his or her peak level. Athletes are constantly seeking ways to speed muscle recovery from strenuous exercise and muscle damage. Anabolic steroids are potent stimulators of muscle growth and repair and have been used extensively by athletes to hasten structural and functional recovery during peak periods of strenuous training. However, anabolic steroids are classified as banned substances by all major sports organizing committees that oversee and regulate amateur and professional athletics. In addition long-term use of anabolic steroids has known side effects that can negatively impact an athlete's health status. Dietary supplements are safe and viable alternatives that, if taken in the optimal doses, can provide positive effects on muscle growth and repair and ultimately human performance. Athletes have used dietary supplements extensively to facilitate tissue growth and repair following muscle-damaging events such as high-intensity resistance exercise and participation in contact sports. Following intense resistance exercise, an acute inflammatory response drives the repair process by synthesizing and releasing chemical mediators locally in the injured muscle. Inflammatory mediators help attract growth factors used for protein synthesis. The inflammatory response has also been shown to produce high levels of oxygen-derived free radicals that if allowed to proceed unabated, can produce further muscle damage, thus hindering the repair process. A protein-based dietary supplement, if taken in the optimal dosing schedule, may enhance the recovery process by blunting the magnitude of the acute inflammatory response and facilitating growth and repair through increased protein synthesis in damaged muscle tissue. Understanding the nutritional requirements of athletes engaged in high intensity training and competition is necessary to insure adequate recovery between exercise bouts. This will improve training and functional gains as well as act as a prophylaxis to skeletal muscle injury.

The objectives of this study are to assess the effectiveness of a nutritional supplement on muscle functional recovery following induced muscle damage from high intensity resistance exercise. This will be accomplished by evaluating baseline changes over the course of the recovery phase on severity of the symptomatic response and functional impairment in post-exercise skeletal muscle damage. The biceps brachii muscle will be targeted for this study. The investigators have established a safe and effective experimental arm curl model for inducing skeletal muscle soreness and dysfunction in human subjects using eccentric exercise to the bicep brachii muscle.
Study Started
Jul 31
2006
Primary Completion
Jul 31
2007
Study Completion
Jul 31
2007
Last Update
Jul 15
2019

Dietary Supplement dicreatinol sulfate

nutritional supplement

  • Other names: Sham control

Drug placebo sugar pill

Sugar pill Placebo Comparator

Placebo "sugar" pill was used as a sham control

dicreatinol sulfate Experimental

Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

Healthy
Non-smoking
Untrained young adult males and females (age 18-25 years)
Free of vitamin/mineral supplementation for six weeks prior to the study

Exclusion Criteria:

Pregnant or positive pregnancy test
Persons involved in a regular weight-training program within the last six weeks or with a prior history (within the last 6 weeks) of injury to the biceps brachii or elbow region
Recent history or current reported use of anti-inflammatory medication, and active weight loss > 5 kg in prior 3 months (intended or unintended)
No Results Posted