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The effect of citrate loading on exercise performance, acid-base balance and metabolism
Authors:John M Kowalchuk  Stephen A Maltais  Keiji Yamaji and Richard L Hughson
Institution:Department of Kinesiology, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Abstract:Nine subjects (VO2max 65 +/- 2 ml.kg-1.min-1, mean +/- SEM) were studied on two occasions following ingestion of 500 ml solution containing either sodium citrate (C, 0.300 g.kg-1 body mass) or a sodium chloride placebo (P, 0.045 g.kg-1 body mass). Exercise began 60 min later and consisted of cycle ergometer exercise performed continuously for 20 min each at power outputs corresponding to 33% and 66% VO2max, followed by exercise to exhaustion at 95% VO2max. Pre-exercise arterialized-venous H+] was lower in C (36.2 +/- 0.5 nmol.l-1; pH 7.44) than P (39.4 +/- 0.4 nmol.l-1; pH 7.40); the plasma H+] remained lower and HCO3-] remained higher in C than P throughout exercise and recovery. Exercise time to exhaustion at 95% VO2max was similar in C (310 +/- 69 s) and P (313 +/- 74 s). Cardiorespiratory variables (ventilation, VO2, VCO2, heart rate) measured during exercise were similar in the two conditions. The plasma citrate] was higher in C at rest (C, 195 +/- 19 mumol.l-1; P, 81 +/- 7 mumol.l-1) and throughout exercise and recovery. The plasma lactate] and free fatty acid] were not affected by citrate loading but the plasma glycerol] was lower during exercise in C than P. In conclusion, sodium citrate ingestion had an alkalinizing effect in the plasma but did not improve endurance time during exercise at 95% VO2max. Furthermore, citrate loading may have prevented the stimulation of lipolysis normally observed with exercise and prevented the stimulation of glycolysis in muscle normally observed in bicarbonate-induced alkalosis.
Keywords:Citrate  Alkalosis  Buffering  Performance  Lactate  Glycerol  Free fatty acids
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