SummaryCaffeine is one of the famous ergogenic aids in the athletic field. Caffeine has been known to stimulate lipolysis that spares stored glycogen utilization during moderate intensity exercise. Therefore, we investigated the effects of caffeine ingestion on exercise per formance in rats and athletes. Rats were administered the caffeine (6mg/kg) 1h prior to the exercise then were run on a treadmill at a speed of 20m/min. They were decapitated at 0min, 30min, 60min of exercise, and exhausted time point. Human subjects ingested the caffeine (5mg/kg) 1h prior to the exercise. They exercised on a cycle ergometer at 60% of their VO2max for 45min, and then the exercise intensity was increased to 80% of their VO 2max until exhaustion. Blood and breathing gas samples were collected and calculated every 10min during exercise. Respiratory exchange ratio of the caffeine trial was signifi cantly lower than that of the placebo trial in the athletes' study (p<0.05). Blood free fatty acid (FFA) levels in studies of both rats and athletes were increased by caffeine ingestion during exercise (p<0.05). Blood lactate levels were also increased during exercise in both rats and athletes (p<0.05). Increased FFA and glycerol concentrations reduced glycogen utilization during exercise compared with placebo group in rats. In addition, endurance time to exhaustion was significantly increased by the caffeine ingestion in both rats and ath letes (p<0.05). These results suggest that the caffeine ingestion enhanced endurance per formance resulting from spare stored glycogen with increasing lipolysis from adipose tissues and fat oxidation during exercise both in rats and in athletes.
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