Caffeine
Caffeine: Does caffeine boost competitive female athletes?
Ergogenic aids for sports performance are not a new topic for research but there is always room for new evidence to support existing arguments. A paper by Coghill and co-workers at the Exercise and Health Research Unit at the University of Bristol investigated the effect of caffeine ingestion in competitive female runners - much of the previous research has examined males.
It was found that the caffeine ingestion before exercise led to a decrease in the RPE of the runners as well as an increase in the blood glucose during the 40-minute run compared with the placebo condition. The implication is that such caffeine supplementation could be of benefit to endurance performance, though it should be stressed that the run performance used here was submaximal and not a replication of a race situation.
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