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Department of Human Biology and Nutritional Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario, Canada N1G 2W1
The purposes of the present studies
were to test the hypotheses that lower dosages of oral pyruvate
ingestion would increase blood pyruvate concentration and that the
ingestion of a commonly recommended dosage of pyruvate (7 g) for 7 days
would enhance performance during intense aerobic exercise in
well-trained individuals. Nine recreationally active subjects (8 women,
1 man) consumed 7, 15, and 25 g of pyruvate and were monitored for
a 4-h period to determine whether blood metabolites were altered.
Pyruvate consumption failed to significantly elevate blood pyruvate,
and it had no effect on indexes of carbohydrate (blood glucose,
lactate) or lipid metabolism (blood glycerol, plasma free fatty acids). As a follow-up, we administered 7 g/day of either placebo or pyruvate, for a 1-wk period to seven, well-trained male cyclists (maximal oxygen
consumption, 62.3 ± 3.0 ml · kg
1 · min
1) in a randomized,
double-blind, crossover trial. Subjects cycled at 74-80% of their
maximal oxygen consumption until exhaustion. There was no difference in
performance times between the two trials (placebo, 91 ± 9 min;
pyruvate, 88 ± 8 min). Measured blood parameters (insulin,
peptide C, glucose, lactate, glycerol, free fatty acids) were also
unaffected. Our results indicate that oral pyruvate supplementation
does not increase blood pyruvate content and does not enhance
performance during intense exercise in well-trained cyclists.
ergogenic aid; cycling; blood metabolites
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