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Two weeks of repetitive gut-challenge reduce exercise-associated gastrointestinal symptoms and malabsorption

journal contribution
posted on 2018-02-01, 00:00 authored by A Miall, A Khoo, C Rauch, Rhiannon SnipeRhiannon Snipe, V L Camões-Costa, P R Gibson, R J S Costa
Debilitating gastrointestinal symptoms is a common feature of endurance running and may be exacerbated by and/or limit the ability to tolerate carbohydrate intake during exercise. The study aimed to determine whether two weeks of repetitive gut-challenge during running can reduce exercise-associated gastrointestinal symptoms and carbohydrate malabsorption. Endurance runners (n=18) performed an initial gut-challenge trial (GC1) comprising 2-hour running exercise at 60% VO2max (steady state) while consuming a formulated gel-disk containing 30 g carbohydrates (2:1 glucose-fructose, 10% w/v) every 20 minutes, followed by a 1-hour running effort bout. Gastrointestinal symptoms, feeding tolerance, and breath hydrogen (H2 ) were determined along the gut-challenge trial. After GC1, participants were randomly assigned to a blinded carbohydrate (CHO, 90 gCHO hour-1 ) or placebo (PLA, 0 gCHO hour-1 ) gut-training group. This comprised of consuming the group-specific feeding intervention during 1-hour running exercise at 60% VO2max equivalent, daily over a period of two weeks. Participants then repeated the gut-challenge trial (GC2). In GC2, a reduced gut discomfort (P=.012), total (P=.009), upper- (P=.015), and lower-gastrointestinal (P=.008) symptoms, and nausea (P=.05) were observed on CHO, but not PLA. Feeding tolerance did not differ between GC1 and GC2 on CHO and PLA. H2 peak was attenuated in GC2 (6±3 ppm) compared to GC1 (13±6 ppm) on CHO (P=.004), but not on PLA (GC1 11±7 ppm, and GC2 10±10 ppm). The effort bout distance was greater in GC2 (12.3±1.3 km) compared with GC1 (11.7±1.5 km) on CHO (P=.035) only. Two weeks of repetitive gut-challenge improve gastrointestinal symptoms and reduce carbohydrate malabsorption during endurance running, which may have performance implications.

History

Journal

Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports

Volume

28

Issue

2

Pagination

630 - 640

Publisher

Wiley

Location

Chichester, Eng.

eISSN

1600-0838

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, John Wiley & Sons