Content area

Abstract

The purpose of this review was to provide a systematic and comprehensive analysis of the literature that tested the hypothesis that protein supplements, when combined with carbohydrate, directly enhance endurance performance by sparing muscle glycogen during exercise and increasing the rate of glycogen restoration during recovery. The analysis was used to create evidence statements based on an accepted strength of recommendation taxonomy. All papers were read in detail and searched for experimental design confounders such as energy content of the supplements, dietary control, use of trained or untrained participants, number of subjects recruited, direct measures of muscle glycogen utilization and restoration, and the sensitivity of the test metrics to explain the discrepant findings. The authors' evidence statements assert that when carbohydrate supplementation was delivered at optimal rates during or after exercise, protein supplements provided no further ergogenic effect, regardless of the performance metric used. In addition, the limited data available suggested recovery of muscle glycogen stores together with subsequent rate of utilization during exercise is not related to the potential ergogenic effect of protein supplements.

Details

Title
Effects of Protein in Combination with Carbohydrate Supplements on Acute or Repeat Endurance Exercise Performance: A Systematic Review
Author
McLellan, Tom M; Pasiakos, Stefan M; Lieberman, Harris R
Pages
535-50
Section
SYSTEMATIC REVIEW
Publication year
2014
Publication date
Apr 2014
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
01121642
e-ISSN
11792035
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1624972188
Copyright
Copyright Wolters Kluwer Health Adis International Apr 2014