2019
DOI: 10.1007/s00421-019-04086-w
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Capsaicin supplementation increases time to exhaustion in high-intensity intermittent exercise without modifying metabolic responses in physically active men

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Cited by 26 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…Our previous studies [12][13][14] demonstrated bene ts of acute CAP application in physically active subjects but not in the current study with amateur athletes.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 78%
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“…Our previous studies [12][13][14] demonstrated bene ts of acute CAP application in physically active subjects but not in the current study with amateur athletes.…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 78%
“…The dose of capsaicin is not well established in humans. Previous studies from our research group found an improvement in performance applying 12 mg of CAP 45 minutes before different types of exercise and protocols (400 meters; 1.500 meters; 3.000 meters and high-intensity intermittent exercise) in physically active men [12][13][14]. Additionally, improvements in combined exercise protocols, such as 5-km running plus strength exercise were detected applying 24 mg of CAP in two doses of 12 mg with 45 minutes interval between doses [15].…”
mentioning
confidence: 68%
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“…To date, only four studies have investigated the ergogenic properties of capsaicin ingestion [64,65,66] or mouth swilling [12] in humans, and as such an array of protocols, dosages and performance measures have been assessed. Three studies have investigated the effect of acute supplementation of capsaicin (12 mg) 45 min prior to athletic performance in a 1500-m running time trial [65], four sets of 70% 1RM repeated squats to failure [13], and time to exhaustion during repeated 15-s treadmill running at 120% VO with 15-s rest intervals [66]. Capsaicin supplementation improved 1500-m time-trial performance (CAP 371.6 ± 40.8 s vs. Pla 376.7 ± 39 s), total mass lifted (CAP 3,919.4 ± 1,227.4 kg vs. Pla 3,179.6 ± 942.4 kg) and time to exhaustion (CAP 1530 ± 515 s vs. Pla 1342 ± 446 s) compared to placebo.…”
Section: Thermal Tastants and Athletic Performancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The dose of capsaicin in studies remains not well established for humans. Previously studies from our research group have used 12 mg of CAP 45 minutes before the exercise trials and there was found an improvement in performance for short duration aerobic exercise (Costa et al, 2020;de Freitas, Billaut, et al, 2019; Freitas et al, 2018) and in combined exercise protocol (5-km running plus strength exercise), was 24 mg of CAP in two doses of 12 mg with 45 minutes interval between doses (de Freitas, Cholewa, et al, 2019).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%