2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.nutres.2013.04.009
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Acute sodium bicarbonate loading has negligible effects on resting and exercise blood pressure but causes gastrointestinal distress

Abstract: Oral ingestion of sodium bicarbonate (bicarbonate loading) has acute ergogenic effects on short-duration, high-intensity exercise. Because sodium bicarbonate is 27% sodium, ergogenic doses (i.e. 300 mg·kg−1) result in sodium intakes well above the Dietary Reference Intakes upper limit of 2300 mg/day. Therefore, it is conceivable that bicarbonate loading could have hypertensive effects. Therefore, we performed a double-blind cross-over trial to evaluate the hypothesis that bicarbonate loading increases resting … Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(44 citation statements)
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“…PTSR performance parameters in this study might also have been influenced by gastro-intestinal (GI) disturbances. Negative GI symptoms caused by bicarbonate ingestion have been reported in the literature [21,72,73] and GI discomfort is suggested to have ergolytic effects on anaerobic performance [15,19]. Unfortunately, we did not carry out any structured monitoring of GI discomfort in the current participants, which represents a limitation of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…PTSR performance parameters in this study might also have been influenced by gastro-intestinal (GI) disturbances. Negative GI symptoms caused by bicarbonate ingestion have been reported in the literature [21,72,73] and GI discomfort is suggested to have ergolytic effects on anaerobic performance [15,19]. Unfortunately, we did not carry out any structured monitoring of GI discomfort in the current participants, which represents a limitation of this study.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 90%
“…In these situations it would also be advisable to consume 0.1 g . kg -1 BM of NaHCO3, given that lower doses reduce the intensity and/or frequency of negative GI symptoms (McNaughton, 1992;Kahle et al 2013), which would benefit athletes in the competitive setting. Some athletes require co-ingestion of NaHCO3 with food and fluid in order to reduce GI symptoms, therefore lowering the dose could lead to a reduction in the amount of food/fluid ingested, vital for athletes competing numerous times within a short period.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…NaHCO3 ingestion can result in gastrointestinal (GI) distress Siegler et al 2012;Peart et al 2012), with 10% of participants not tolerating the doses needed to gain a beneficial performance effect (McNaughton et al 2008). As dose increases, GI discomfort is more commonplace, often without additional performance improvements (McNaughton, 1991;Kahle et al 2013). To combat GI symptoms, stacking dose strategies has been implemented (Sale et al 2011;Saunders et al 2014a); splitting larger doses (0.3 g .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…No obstante, un estudio de Kahle y cols. (41) no encontró ninguna relación, aunque se llevó a cabo en jóvenes, menos sensibles a la ingesta de sal.…”
Section: Efectos Adversosunclassified