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Ad libitum ice slurry ingestion and half-marathon performance in a hot environment: A study comparing the effects of the amount and moment of ingestion between ice slurry and water at 37 °C.

Authors :
Andrade, Marcelo T.
Wanner, Samuel P.
Santos, Weslley M.e.
Mendes, Thiago T.
Nunes-Leite, Matheus M.S.
de Oliveira, Gustavo G.A.
Carmo, Adriano A.L.
Carvalho, Moisés V.
Silami Garcia, Emerson
Soares, Danusa D.
Source :
Journal of Thermal Biology. Jan2024, Vol. 119, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Ice slurry ingestion during prolonged exercises may improve performance in hot environments; however, the ideal amount and timing of ingestion are still uncertain. We determined whether ad libitum ice slurry ingestion influences physiological and perceptual variables and half-marathon performance while comparing the effects of the amount and moment of ingestion between ice slurry and water at 37 °C. Ten trained participants (28 ± 2 years; mean and SD) were required to run two half marathons while consuming either ice slurry (-1 °C; Ad-1) or water (37 °C; 37 CE) ad libitum. They then performed two other half marathons where, during one, they were required to ingest an amount of water equivalent to the amount consumed during the Ad-1 trial (Pro37), and in the other, to ingest ice slurry in the amount consumed during the 37 CE trial (Pro-1). During the half marathons, dry-bulb temperature and relative humidity were controlled at 33.1 ± 0.3 °C and 60 ± 3%, respectively. Ad-1 ingestion (349.6 ± 58.5 g) was 45% less than 37 CE ingestion (635.5 ± 135.8 g). Physical performance, heart rate, perceived exertion, body temperatures, and thermal perception were not influenced by the temperature or amount of beverage ingestion. However, a secondary analysis suggested that lower beverage ingestion was associated with improved performance (Ad-1 + Pro37 vs. 37 CE + Pro-1: −4.0 min, Cohen's d = 0.39), with a significant relationship between lower beverage ingestion and faster running time (b = 0.02, t = 4.01, p < 0.001). In conclusion, ice slurry ingestion does not affect performance or physiological or perceptual variables during a half marathon in a hot environment. Preliminary evidence suggests that lower beverage ingestion (ice slurry or warm water) is associated with improved performance compared to higher ingestion. • The current study controlled the temperature of beverages and ingestion behavior. • Ad libitum ice slurry does not improve half-marathon performance in the heat. • Athletes ingested less ice slurry than 37 °C water during the ad libitum trials. • 80% of athletes reported gastric discomfort and headache when ingesting ice slurry. • Half-marathon performance was 3–4% better in trials with lower beverage ingestion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03064565
Volume :
119
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Thermal Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175569664
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jtherbio.2023.103781