L-arginine reduces exercise-induced increase in plasma lactate and ammonia

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Deutscher übersetzter Titel:L-Arginin vermindert das belastungsinduzierte Anwachsen von Plasmalaktat und Ammoniak
Autor:Schaefer, A.; Piquard, F.; Geny, B.; Doutreleau, S.; Lampert, E.; Mettauer, B.; Lonsdorfer, J.
Erschienen in:International journal of sports medicine
Veröffentlicht:23 (2002), 6, S. 403-407, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource Elektronische Ressource (online)
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0172-4622, 1439-3964
DOI:10.1055/s-2002-33743
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Erfassungsnummer:PU200406001924
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

To investigate the effect of L-arginine supplementation (L-ARG) on physiological and metabolic changes during exercise, we determined in a double-blind study the cardiorespiratory (heart rate, oxygen consumption (VO2) and carbon dioxide production (VCO2) and the metabolic (lactate and ammonia) responses to maximal exercise after either an intravenous L-ARG hydrochloride salt or placebo load in 8 healthy subjects. Exercise-induced increases in heart rate, VO2 and VCO2 were not significantly different after L-ARG or placebo. By contrast, peak plasma ammonia and lactate were significantly decreased after L-ARG load (60.6 ± 8.2 vs. 73.1 ± 9.1 µmol/l, p<0.01 and 7.1 ± 0.7 vs. 8.2 ± 1.1 mmol/l, p<0.01, for ammonia and lactate, respectively). Plasma L-citrulline increased significantly during exercise only after L-ARG load, despite a concomitant decrease in plasma L-ARG. Fur-thermore, a significant inverse relationship was observed between changes in lactate and L-citrulline concentrations after L-ARG load (r=-0.84, p=0.009). These results demonstrate that intravenous L-ARG reduces significantly exercise-induced increase in plasma lactate and ammonia. Taken together, the specific L-citrulline increase and the inverse relationship observed between L-citrulline and plasma lactate after L-ARG might support that L-ARG supplementation enhances the L-arginine-nitric oxide (NO) pathway during exercise. Verf.-Referat