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The Effect of Caffeine Ingestion during Evening Exercise on Subsequent Sleep Quality in Females.

International journal of sports medicine
June 1, 2015
A Ali et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to examine the effects of caffeine supplementation on sleep quality in female athletes taking low-dose monophasic oral contraceptives following intermittent treadmill-running.

Results Summary

Caffeine ingestion impaired sleep latency and quality but did not affect how participants felt upon awakening. Plasma caffeine concentration peaked at 100 minutes post-ingestion, with a prolonged elimination half-life of 17.63±8.06 hours.

Population

10 female athletes taking monophasic oral contraceptives.

Effective Dosage

6 mg/kg body mass anhydrous caffeine.

Duration

Single dose, effects monitored up to ~15 hours post-ingestion.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (6)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
caffeine supplementation
increase
paraxanthine levels
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
significantly elevated
#1
caffeine supplementation
increase
theophylline levels
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
significantly elevated
#2
caffeine supplementation
no change
theobromine levels
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
no significant change
#3
caffeine supplementation
increase
sleep latency
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
impaired
#4
caffeine supplementation
decrease
subsequent quality of sleep
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
impaired
#5
caffeine supplementation
no change
how participants were feeling upon awakening
female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid
-
no differences
#6
Abstract

In a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design, 10 females taking monophasic oral contraceptives completed 90 min intermittent treadmill-running 45 min after ingestion of 6 mg∙kg(-1) body mass anhydrous caffeine or artificial sweetener (placebo). Water (3 mL∙kg(-1)) was provided every 15 min during exercise. Venous blood samples were taken before, during and after exercise, as well as after sleep (~15 h post-ingestion), and levels of caffeine, paraxanthine, theobromine and theophylline were measured using high-performance liquid chromatography. Sleep quality was assessed using the Leeds Sleep Evaluation Questionnaire. Plasma caffeine concentration peaked 100 min after ingestion. Caffeine clearance was 0.95±0.14 mL·min(-1)·kg(-1) while the elimination half-life of caffeine was 17.63±8.06 h. Paraxanthine and theophylline levels were significantly elevated at 15 h with no significant change in theobromine. Sleep latency and subsequent quality of sleep was impaired following caffeine supplementation (P<0.05); there were no differences between trials for how participants were feeling upon awakening. This is the first controlled study to examine caffeine supplementation on sleep quality in female athletes taking a low-dose monophasic oral contraceptive steroid following an intermittent-exercise running protocol. The data shows that female athletes using monophasic oral contraceptive steroids will have impaired sleep quality following evening caffeine ingestion.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultCaffeineContraceptives, OralCross-Over StudiesDouble-Blind MethodExerciseExercise TestFemaleHumansSleepTheobromineTheophyllineYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety70
Efficacy85/10
Quality90/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations24
Citations/Year2.4
Relative Citation Ratio1.41
NIH Percentile63%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score1.90
Normalized Score0.80
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