Caffeine increases both total work performed above critical power and peripheral fatigue during a 4-km cycling time trial

Author:

Felippe Leandro Camati1,Ferreira Guilherme Assunção1ORCID,Learsi Sara Kely1,Boari Daniel2,Bertuzzi Romulo3,Lima-Silva Adriano Eduardo14ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sport Science Research Group, Federal University of Pernambuco, Pernambuco, Brazil

2. Center of Engineering, Modeling, and Applied Social Science, Federal University of ABC, São Paulo, Brazil

3. Endurance Performance Research Group (GEDAE-USP), University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

4. Human Performance Research Group, Technological Federal University of Parana, Parana, Brazil

Abstract

The link between total work performed above critical power (CP) and peripheral muscle fatigue during self-paced exercise is unknown. We investigated the influence of caffeine on the total work done above CP during a 4-km cycling time trial (TT) and the subsequent consequence on the development of central and peripheral fatigue. Nine cyclists performed three constant-load exercise trials to determine CP and two 4-km TTs ~75 min after oral caffeine (5 mg/kg) or cellulose (placebo) ingestion. Neuromuscular functions were assessed before and 50 min after supplementation and 1 min after TT. Oral supplementation alone had no effect on neuromuscular function ( P > 0.05). Compared with placebo, caffeine increased mean power output (~4%, P = 0.01) and muscle recruitment (as inferred by EMG, ~17%, P = 0.01) and reduced the time to complete the TT (~2%, P = 0.01). Work performed above CP during the caffeine trial (16.7 ± 2.1 kJ) was significantly higher than during the placebo (14.7 ± 2.1 kJ, P = 0.01). End-exercise decline in quadriceps twitch force (pre- to postexercise decrease in twitch force at 1 and 10 Hz) was more pronounced after caffeine compared with placebo (121 ± 13 and 137 ± 14 N vs. 146 ± 13 and 156 ± 11 N; P < 0.05). There was no effect of caffeine on central fatigue. In conclusion, caffeine increases muscle recruitment, which enables greater work performed above CP and higher end-exercise peripheral locomotor muscle fatigue. NEW & NOTEWORTHY The link between total work done above critical power and peripheral fatigue during a self-paced, high-intensity exercise is unclear. This study revealed that caffeine ingestion increases muscle recruitment, which enables greater work done above critical power and a greater degree of end-exercise decline in quadriceps twitch force during a 4-km cycling time trial. These findings suggest that caffeine increases performance at the expense of greater locomotor muscle fatigue.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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