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Exogenous Caffeine Ingestion Does Not Increase Plantarflexor Torque in Older or Younger Men

Authors :
Lucas Ugliara
Martim Bottaro
Sávio Alex
James J. Tufano
Anthony J. Blazevich
Valdinar Junior
Amilton Vieira
Source :
Journal of Aging and Physical Activity. :1-8
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Human Kinetics, 2022.

Abstract

Aging is associated with neurodegeneration and a loss of muscle function, especially in lower-limb muscles. While caffeine may augment muscle force generation through multiple effects on the central nervous system, no studies have yet compared the effects of caffeine on force-generating capacity between younger and older men, who might respond differently due to age-related changes in the structures on which caffeine acts. In a double-blind, controlled trial, 22 younger (25 ± 5 years) and 21 older (68 ± 6 years) men were tested for isometric plantarflexor torque on two separate days (2–7 days apart) before and 60 min after ingesting 3 mg/kg (∼2 cups of coffee) of caffeine or placebo. No effects of caffeine ingestion on peak torque or rate of torque development were detected in either older or younger men. Therefore, 3 mg/kg of caffeine may not acutely counteract age-related decreases in force capacity of the functionally important plantarflexor muscles.

Details

ISSN :
1543267X and 10638652
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Aging and Physical Activity
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0435ce1e3382c4104f9358e5c1e527fd