Artigo Acesso aberto Produção Nacional Revisado por pares

Caffeine improved cycling trial performance in mentally fatigued cyclists, regardless of alterations in prefrontal cortex activation

2019; Elsevier BV; Volume: 204; Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.physbeh.2019.02.009

ISSN

1873-507X

Autores

Paulo Estevão Franco‐Alvarenga, Cayque Brietzke, Raul Canestri, Márcio Fagundes Goethel, Florentina J. Hettinga, Tony Meireles Santos, Flávio Oliveira Pires,

Tópico(s)

Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet

Resumo

To verify whether caffeine (CAF) could increase the prefrontal cortex (PFC) activation and improve 20 km cycling time trial (TT20km) performance in mentally fatigued cyclists. After preliminary TT20km, twelve recreational cyclists (VO2MAX of 58.9 ± 6.2 mL kg min−1) performed a familiarization with a cognitive test to induce mental fatigue (MF) and psychological scales. Thereafter, they performed: 2) a baseline TT20km; 3) a mentally fatigued TT20km (MF); 4 and 5) a mentally fatigued TT20km after CAF (MF + CAF) or placebo (MF + PLA) ingestion, in a double-blind, counterbalanced design. Performance and psychological responses were obtained throughout the TT20km, while PFC electroencephalography (EEG) theta wave was obtained before and after the mental fatigue test. The mental fatigue-induced increase in EEG theta wave (↑ ~ 4.8%) was reverted with CAF (↓ 8.8%) and PLA ingestion (↓ 4.8%). CAF improved TT20km performance in mentally fatigued cyclists by reducing time (p = .00; ↓ ~ 1.7%) and increasing WMEAN (p = .00; ↑ ~ 3.6%), when compared to MF + PLA. The RPE-power output ratio was lower (p = .01), but affect (p = .018), motivation (p = .033) and emotional arousal (p = .001) were greater throughout the TT20km in MF + CAF than in MF + PLA. CAF ingestion improved TT20km performance and psychological responses in mentally fatigued cyclists, despite the unaltered PFC activation.

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