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The Impact of Preconditioning Strategies Designed to Improve 2000-m Rowing Ergometer Performance in Trained Rowers: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

International journal of sports physiology and performance
January 1, 1970
Tiago Turnes et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleMeta-AnalysisSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effect of beta-alanine supplementation on 2000-m rowing-ergometer performance in trained rowers.

Results Summary

Beta-alanine consumption very likely improved performance, with a 1.4% (90% CL ±1.2%) enhancement in mean power during the 2000-m test. The effect was consistent and statistically significant.

Population

Trained rowers

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (9)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
caffeine consumption
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
-
most likely improves performance
#1
caffeine consumption (higher doses ≥6 mg·kg-1)
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
-
superior effect
#2
sodium bicarbonate consumption
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
2.6% (90% CL ±1.5%)
likely performance improvements
#3
beta-alanine consumption
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
1.4% (90% CL ±1.2%)
very likely performance improvements
#4
heat acclimation
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
-
small to moderate enhancements
#5
rehydration
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
-
small to moderate enhancements
#6
creatine
increase
2000-m rowing-ergometer performance
trained rowers
-
small to moderate enhancements
#7
preconditioning strategies (overall)
increase
2000-m mean power
trained rowers
2.1% (90% CL ±0.6%)
beneficial effect
#8
preconditioning strategies (with higher baseline performance)
decrease
percentage change with interventions
trained rowers
-1.1% (90% CL ±1.2%) for 1.0-W·kg-1 increment in performance baseline
possible small decrease
#9
Abstract

PURPOSE: The 2000-m rowing-ergometer test is the most common measure of rowing performance. Because athletes use different intervention strategies for enhancing performance, investigating the effect of preconditioning strategies on the 2000-m test is of great relevance. This study evaluated the effects of different preconditioning strategies on 2000-m rowing-ergometer performance in trained rowers. METHODS: A search of electronic databases (PubMed, Google Scholar, and Web of Science) identified 27 effects of different preconditioning strategies from 17 studies. Outcomes were calculated as percentage differences between control and experimental interventions, and data were presented as mean ± 90% confidence interval. Performance data were converted to the same metrics, that is, mean power. Meta-regression analyses were conducted to assess whether performance level or caffeine dose could affect the percentage change. RESULTS: The overall beneficial effect on 2000-m mean power was 2.1% (90% confidence limit [CL] ±0.6%). Training status affected the percentage change with interventions, with a -1.1% (90% CL ±1.2%) possible small decrease for 1.0-W·kg-1 increment in performance baseline. Caffeine consumption most likely improves performance, with superior effect in higher doses (≥6 mg·kg-1). Sodium bicarbonate and beta-alanine consumption resulted in likely (2.6% [90% CL ±1.5%]) and very likely (1.4% [90% CL ±1.2%]) performance improvements, respectively. However, some preconditioning strategies such as heat acclimation, rehydration, and creatine resulted in small to moderate enhancements in 2000-m performance. CONCLUSIONS: Supplementation of caffeine and beta-alanine is a popular and effective strategy to improve 2000-m ergometer performance in trained rowers. Additional research is warranted to confirm the benefit of other strategies to 2000-m rowing-ergometer performance.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AthletesAthletic PerformanceCaffeineDietary SupplementsErgometryHumansPerformance-Enhancing SubstancesSodium BicarbonateSports Nutritional Physiological PhenomenaWater Sportsbeta-Alanine
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy85/10
Quality78/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations8
Citations/Year1.3
Relative Citation Ratio0.86
NIH Percentile44.5%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.25
Weight Score1.60
Normalized Score0.70
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