Crisis of confidence averted: Impairment of exercise economy and performance in elite race walkers by ketogenic low carbohydrate, high fat (LCHF) diet is reproducible

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Burke, Louise M
Sharma, Avish P
Heikura, Ida A
Forbes, Sara F
Holloway, Melissa
McKay, Alannah KA
Bone, Julia L
Leckey, Jill J
Welvaert, Marijke
Ross, Megan L
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2020
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Introduction We repeated our study of intensified training on a ketogenic low-carbohydrate (CHO), high-fat diet (LCHF) in world-class endurance athletes, with further investigation of a “carryover” effect on performance after restoring CHO availability in comparison to high or periodised CHO diets. Methods After Baseline testing (10,000 m IAAF-sanctioned race, aerobic capacity and submaximal walking economy) elite male and female race walkers undertook 25 d supervised training and repeat testing (Adapt) on energy-matched diets: High CHO availability (8.6 g.kg-1.d-1 CHO, 2.1 g.kg-1.d-1 protein; 1.2 g.kg-1.d-1 fat) including CHO before/during/after workouts (HCHO, n = 8): similar macronutrient intake periodised within/between days to manipulate low and high CHO availability at various workouts (PCHO, n = 8); and LCHF (<50 g.d-1 CHO; 78% energy as fat; 2.1 g.kg-1.d-1 protein; n = 10). After Adapt, all athletes resumed HCHO for 2.5 wk before a cohort (n = 19) completed a 20 km race. Results All groups increased VO2peak (ml.kg-1.min-1) at Adapt (p = 0.02, 95%CI: [0.35–2.74]). LCHF markedly increased whole-body fat oxidation (from 0.6 g.min-1 to 1.3 g.min-1), but also the oxygen cost of walking at race-relevant velocities. Differences in 10,000 m performance were clear and meaningful: HCHO improved by 4.8% or 134 s (95% CI: [207 to 62 s]; p < 0.001), with a trend for a faster time (2.2%, 61 s [-18 to +144 s]; p = 0.09) in PCHO. LCHF were slower by 2.3%, -86 s ([-18 to -144 s]; p < 0.001), with no evidence of superior “rebound” performance over 20 km after 2.5 wk of HCHO restoration and taper. Conclusion Our previous findings of impaired exercise economy and performance of sustained high-intensity race walking following keto-adaptation in elite competitors were repeated. Furthermore, there was no detectable benefit from undertaking an LCHF intervention as a periodised strategy before a 2.5-wk race preparation/taper with high CHO availability.

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PLoS One

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15

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6

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© 2020 Burke et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

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Sports science and exercise

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Multidisciplinary Sciences

Science & Technology - Other Topics

ENDURANCE PERFORMANCE

RESPIRATORY QUOTIENT

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Burke, LM; Sharma, AP; Heikura, IA; Forbes, SF; Holloway, M; McKay, AKA; Bone, JL; Leckey, JJ; Welvaert, M; Ross, ML, Crisis of confidence averted: Impairment of exercise economy and performance in elite race walkers by ketogenic low carbohydrate, high fat (LCHF) diet is reproducible, PLoS One, 2020, 15 (6), pp. e0234027

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