Antioxidant supplementation preserves antioxidant response in physical training and low antioxidant intake

  • Palazzetti S
  • Rousseau A
  • Richard M
  • et al.
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Abstract

The present controlled-training double-blind study (supplemented (S) group, n 7; placebo (P) group, n 10) was designed to investigate whether an antioxidant mixture (Se 150 μg, retinyl acetate mg, ascorbic acid 120 mg, α-tocopheryl succinate) would allow overloaded triathletes to avoid adaptation failure in the antioxidant system. Dietary intakes were recorded. The supplement of Se, and vitamins A and E provided 100 % of the French RDA. Four weeks of overloaded training (OT) followed 4 weeks of normal training (NT). After NT and OT, biological studies were conducted at rest and after a duathlon test (run 5 km, cycle 20 km, run 5 km). During the 4-week period of NT, blood levels of GSH levels increased in response to supplementation ( P <0·05) and remained elevated during OT. Plasma glutathione peroxidase activity was significantly higher in the S group in all situations after NT and OT ( P <0·01). The S group had increased erythrocyte Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase activity in response to OT ( P <0·05). Supplementation significantly reduced ( P <0·05) the magnitude in duathlon-induced creatine kinase isoenzyme MB mass increase, which tended to be higher with OT ( P =0·09). We conclude that the antioxidant mixture helped to preserve the antioxidant system during an OT-induced stress in subjects with initially low antioxidant intakes. Effects of supplementation during NT and/or OT are shown mostly by the alleviated muscle damage. The effects of the antioxidant mixture were observed for doses that can be provided by a diversified and well-balanced diet. The maintenance of normal nutritional status with regard to the antioxidant intake (Se, vitamins C and E) plays a key role in antioxidant adaptive effects during NT and OT.

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APA

Palazzetti, S., Rousseau, A.-S., Richard, M.-J., Favier, A., & Margaritis, I. (2004). Antioxidant supplementation preserves antioxidant response in physical training and low antioxidant intake. British Journal of Nutrition, 91(1), 91–100. https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn20031027

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