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Central Fatigue

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endurance exercise is related to a buildup. of serotonin (a neurotransmitter) in the brain. ... endurance. Bottom line: the evidence to suggest BCAA ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Central Fatigue


1
Central Fatigue
  • Lecture 18 Part I

2
  • Define fatigue.
  • operating definition inability to
  • maintain a desired level of intensity.
  • We usually think of fatigue during exercise as
  • occurring in the muscle e.g. glycogen depletion
    or
  • some other limitation decreasing the ability to
  • produce ATP at the necessary rate.

3
  • Some work suggests other factors are involved.
  • Coyle et al. infused glucose into the blood of
    trained
  • cyclists (to make sure they were never limited by
  • availability of carbohydrate) and, though they
    were
  • never depleted, they fatigued and stopped cycling.

4
  • In 1987, Newsholme et al. proposed a novel
  • idea called the central fatigue hypothesis.
  • The basis for the idea is that fatigue during
  • endurance exercise is related to a buildup
  • of serotonin (a neurotransmitter) in the brain.

5
  • In 1987, Newsholme et al. proposed a novel
  • idea called the central fatigue hypothesis.
  • The basis for the idea is that fatigue during
  • endurance exercise is related to a buildup
  • of serotonin (a neurotransmitter) in the brain.
  • It is true that increased levels of serotonin
    causes
  • drowsiness and fatigue (many sleeping aids work
    by
  • raising levels of serotonin in the brain).
  • Tryptophan is an amino acid
  • that is converted to 5-
  • OH tryptamine and then
  • to serotonin in the brain.

6
  • In order to get into the
  • brain, tryptyophan must
  • cross the blood-brain
  • barrier via a transporter.
  • The transporter is not
  • specific for tryptophan,
  • it also transports
  • branched chain amino
  • acids (BCAA),
  • so there is a
  • competition
  • for transport.

7
  • During exercise, BCAAs are taken up by muscle
  • and oxidized for energy.
  • Late in exercise, when muscle glycogen stores are
  • low, this process is accelerated. Greater uptake
    of
  • BCAAs late in exercise leads to lower blood BCAA
  • levels and increased ratio of tryptophan/BCAA.
  • So more tryptophan gets into the brain
  • more serotonin production.
  • In addition, as exercise progresses, more free
    fatty
  • acids (FFA) are liberated from triglyceride
    stores
  • and blood level of FFA goes up.

8
  • FFAs and tryptophan are both
  • transported in the blood by
  • albumen (a common plasma protein).
  • As level of FFAs goes up, more tryptophan is
  • displaced from binding sites on albumen and the
  • free tryptophan concentration rises.
  • So, increased BCAA uptake by muscle AND
  • decreased binding capacity by albumen greatly
  • enhances the transport of tryptophan into the
    brain
  • Hypothesis increased tryptophan into brain
    more
  • serotonin central fatigue stop exercise.

9
FFA
tryptophan
FFA
albumen
FFA
BCAA
10
  • How do you test the central fatigue hypothesis?
  • What things do you need to know?
  • Does the ratio of tryptophan/BCAA in the blood
  • increase during exercise?
  • 2. Is there increased entry of tryptophan into
    the brain?
  • 3. Does it cause more production of serotonin?
  • 4. Does that change in serotonin cause more
  • fatigue?

11
  • Because supplement industry is driven
  • by business and not scientific motives,
  • the FIRST studies actually done tested
  • the effects of supplements on humans.
  • A rational approach would have been
  • to supplement with tryptophan and see if it
    caused
  • MORE fatigue. But, b/c you cant make money from
  • an ergolytic (inhibiting performance) compound,
    the
  • first studies tested the efficacy of BCAA
    supplements
  • to delay time to fatigue in athletes.
  • Complications time to fatigue is easy to
    measure
  • in theory but hard to interpret.

12
  • In mid-90s, dozens of studies looking at effects
    of
  • BCAA (with and w/o CHO) on performance. Most
  • showed no effect. Some improved performance but
  • studies were usually seriously flawed.
  • e.g., Blomstrand et al. in 1991 studied effects
    of
  • BCAA ingestion vs. flavored water on marathon
  • runners. No effects unless divided group into
    fast
  • and slow, saw improvement in the slow
    runners.
  • Flaws
  • 1. subjects in 2 groups not matched
  • 2. did not control energy or CHO intake
  • 3. division of runners arbitrary

13
  • Finally, in about 2003, a group of investigators
  • infused tryptophan into the bloodstream of
    rodents
  • and looked at the uptake into the brain and time
    to
  • exhaustion. They found that the greatly elevated
  • levels of tryptophan in the blood did change the
  • BCAA/tryptophan ratio but had no effect at all
    on
  • endurance.

14
  • Bottom line the evidence to suggest BCAA
  • supplements improve endurance performance is
  • almost non-existent. The best designed studies
    all
  • show negative results.
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