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Twenty-four weeks of β-alanine supplementation on carnosine content, related genes, and exercise
Introduction: Skeletal muscle carnosine content can be increased through [beta]-alanine supplementation, but the maximum increase achievable with supplementation is unknown. No study has investigated the effects of prolonged supplementation on carnosine-related genes or exercise capacity.
Purpose: To investigate the effects of 24-weeks of [beta]-alanine supplementation on muscle carnosine content, gene expression and high-intensity cycling capacity (CCT110%).
Methods: Twenty-five active males were supplemented with 6.4 g[middle dot]day-1 of sustained release [beta]-alanine (BA) or placebo (PL) over a 24-week period. Every 4 weeks participants provided a muscle biopsy and performed the CCT110%. Biopsies were analysed for muscle carnosine content and gene expression (CARNS, TauT, ABAT, CNDP2, PHT1, PEPT2 and PAT1).
Results: Carnosine content was increased from baseline at every time point in BA (all P<0.0001; Week 4: +11.37+/-7.03 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm, Week 8: +13.88+/-7.84 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm, Week 12: +16.95+/-8.54 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm, Week 16: +17.63+/-8.42 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm, Week 20: +21.20+/-7.86 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm, Week 24: +20.15+/-7.63 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm), but not PL (all P=1.00). Maximal changes were +25.66+/-7.63 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm (range: +17.13 to +41.32 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm), and absolute maximal content was 48.03+/-8.97 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm (range: 31.79 to 63.92 mmol[middle dot]kg-1dm). There was an effect of supplement (P=0.002) on TauT; no further differences in gene expression were shown. Exercise capacity was improved in BA (P=0.05) with possible to almost certain improvements across all weeks.
Conclusions: Twenty-four weeks of [beta]-alanine supplementation increased muscle carnosine content and improved high-intensity cycling capacity. Downregulation of TauT suggests it plays an important role in muscle carnosine accumulation with [beta]-alanine supplementation, while the variability in changes in muscle carnosine content between individuals suggests that other determinants other than the availability of [beta]-alanine may also bear a major influence on muscle carnosine content
The role of chronic muscle (in)activity on carnosine homeostasis: a study with spinal-cord injured athletes
To examine the role of chronic (in)activity on muscle carnosine (MCarn) and how chronic (in)activity affects MCarn responses to β-alanine supplementation in spinal-cord injured athletes, sixteen male athletes with paraplegia were randomized (2:1 ratio) to receive β-alanine (n=11) or placebo (PL, n=5). They consumed 6.4 g‧d-1 of β-alanine or PL for 28 days. Muscle biopsies of the active deltoid and the inactive vastus lateralis (VL) were taken before and after supplementation. MCarn in the VL was also compared with the VL of a group of individuals without paraplegia (n=15). MCarn was quantified in whole muscle and in pools of individual fibers by High-performance Liquid Chromatography. MCarn was higher in chronically inactive VL vs. well-trained deltoid (32.0±12.0 vs. 20.5±6.1 mmol‧kg-1 DM; p=0.018). MCarn was higher in inactive vs. active VL (32.0±12.0 vs. 21.2±7.5 mmol‧kg-1 DM; p=0.011). In type-I fibers, MCarn was significantly higher in the inactive VL than in the active deltoid (38.3±4.7 vs. 27.3±11.8 mmol‧kg-1 DM, p=0.014). MCarn increased similarly between inactive VL and active deltoid in the β-alanine group (VL: 68.9±55.1%, p=0.0002; deltoid: 90.5±51.4%, p<0.0001), with no changes in the PL group. MCarn content was higher in the inactive VL than in the active deltoid and the active VL, but this is probably a consequence of fiber type shift (type I to type II) that occurs with chronic inactivity. Chronically inactive muscle showed an increase in MCarn after BA supplementation equally to the active muscle, suggesting that carnosine accretion following β-alanine supplementation is not influenced by muscle inactivity
Dysglycemias in pregnancy: from diagnosis to treatment. Brazilian consensus statement
There is an urgent need to find consensus on screening, diagnosing and treating all degrees of DYSGLYCEMIA that may occur during pregnancies in Brazil, considering that many cases of DYSGLYCEMIA in pregnant women are currently not diagnosed, leading to maternal and fetal complications. For this reason the Brazilian Diabetes Society (SBD) and the Brazilian Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics Societies (FEBRASGO), got together to introduce this proposal. We present here a joint consensus regarding the standardization of clinical management for pregnant women with any degree of Dysglycemia, on the basis of current information, to improve medical assistance and to avoid related complications of Dysglycemia in pregnancy to the mother and the fetus. This consensus aims to standardize the diagnosis among general practitioners, endocrinologists and obstetricians allowing the dissemination of information in basic health units, public and private services, that are responsible for screening, diagnosing and treating disglycemic pregnant patients
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