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Apple puree as a natural fructose source provides an effective alternative carbohydrate source for fuelling half-marathon running performance.

Authors :
Reynolds, Kirsty M.
Juett, Loris A.
Funnell, Mark P.
Schofield, Joshua B.
Grundig, Claire
Melidis, George
Brown, Alexander
Hubbard, Will
Luo, Yuxuan
Almahaireh, Ibrahim
James, Lewis J.
Mears, Stephen A.
Source :
European Journal of Sport Science; Oct2023, Vol. 23 Issue 10, p2011-2020, 10p, 4 Charts
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Carbohydrate supplementation during endurance exercise is known to improve performance, but the effects of food-based approaches in running exercise are understudied. Therefore, this study investigated the performance and gastrointestinal (GI) effects of a carbohydrate supplement containing a natural fructose source compared with a highly processed fructose source in a combined glucose-fructose supplement, during a half-marathon. Eleven trained runners (9 males, 2 females; age 32 ± 8 y, 89:53 ± 13:28 min half-marathon personal record) completed a familiarisation (8 miles) and two experimental trials (13.1 miles) on an outdoor running course, with blood and urine samples collected before and after the run. Subjective GI measures were made throughout the run. Carbohydrate was provided as a natural fructose source in the form of apple puree (AP) or highly processed crystalline fructose (GF) in a 2:1 glucose-to-fructose ratio (additional required glucose was provided through maltodextrin). Half-marathon performance was not different between carbohydrate sources (AP 89:52 ± 09:33 min, GF 88:44 ± 10:09 min; P = 0.684). There were no interaction effects for GI comfort (P = 0.305) or other GI symptoms (P ≥ 0.211). There were no differences between carbohydrate sources in ad libitum fluid intake (AP 409 ± 206 mL; GF 294 ± 149 mL; P = 0.094) or any other urinary (P ≥ 0.724), blood-based (P ≥ 0.215) or subjective (P ≥ 0.421) measures. Apple puree as a natural fructose source was equivalent to crystalline fructose in supporting half-marathon running performance without increasing GI symptoms. Highlights Research examining food-first and food-based approaches to carbohydrate supplementation and endurance running performance are limited. Therefore, this study aimed to compare carbohydrate supplements either containing a natural or highly processed fructose source as part of a glucose-fructose supplement on half-marathon running performance and gastrointestinal comfort in trained runners. Running performance (apple puree 89:52 ± 09:33 min vs. crystalline fructose 88:44 ± 10:09 min), gastrointestinal comfort and symptoms were not different between the two fructose sources. Apple puree can be effectively used as a carbohydrate source to fuel half-marathon running performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17461391
Volume :
23
Issue :
10
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Journal of Sport Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
172441556
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/17461391.2023.2207074