Adaptation to a low carbohydrate high fat diet is rapid but impairs endurance exercise metabolism and performance despite enhanced glycogen availability
Key points
Brief (5-6 days) adaptation to a low carbohydrate high fat diet in elite athletes increased exercise fat oxidation to rates previously observed with medium (3-4 weeks) or chronic (>12 months) adherence to this diet, with metabolic changes being washed out in a similar time frame.
Increased fat utilisation during exercise was associated with a 5-8% increase in oxygen cost at speeds related to Olympic Programme races.
Acute restoration of endogenous carbohydrate (CHO) availability (24 h high CHO diet, pre-raceCHO)only partially restored substrate utilisation during a race warm-up. Fat oxidation continued to be elevated above baseline values although it was lower than achieved by 5-6 days` keto adaptation; CHO oxidation only reached 61% and 78% of values previously seen at exercise intensities related to race events.
Acute restoration of CHO availability failed to overturn the impairment of high-intensity endurance performance previously associated with low carbohydrate high fat adaptation, potentially due to the blunted capacity for CHO oxidation.
Abstract
We investigated substrate utilisation during exercise after brief (5-6 days) adaptation to a ketogenic low-carbohydrate (CHO), high-fat (LCHF) diet and similar washout period. Thirteen world-class male race walkers completed economy testing, 25 km training and a 10,000 m race (Baseline),with high CHOavailability (HCHO), repeating this (Adaptation) after 5-6 days` LCHF (n=7; CHO:<50 g day-1, protein: 2.2 g kg-1 day-1; 80% fat) or HCHO (n=6; CHO: 9.7 g kg-1 day-1; protein: 2.2 g kg-1 day-1) diet. An Adaptation race was undertaken after 24 h HCHO and pre-race CHO (2 g kg-1) diet, identical to the Baseline race. Substantial (>200%) increases in exercise fat oxidation occurred in the LCHF Adaptation economy and 25 km tests, reaching mean rates of 1.43 g min-1. However, relative VO2 (ml min-1 kg-1) was higher (P < 0.0001), by 8% and 5% at speeds related to 50 km and 20 km events. During Adaptation race warm-up in the LCHF group, rates of fat and CHO oxidation at these speeds were decreased and increased, respectively (P<0.001), compared with the previous day, butwere not restored to Baseline values. Performance changes differed between groups (P = 0.009), with all HCHO athletes improving in the Adaptation race (5.7 (5.6)%), while 6/7 LCHF athletes were slower (2.2 (3.4)%). Substrate utilisation returned to Baseline values after 5-6 days of HCHO diet. In summary, robust changes in exercise substrate use occurred in 5-6 days of extreme changes in CHO intake. However, adaptation to a LCHF diet plus acute restoration of endogenous CHO availability failed to restore high-intensity endurance performance, with CHO oxidation rates remaining blunted.
© Copyright 2020 The Journal of Physiology. Blackwell Publishing. All rights reserved.
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| Notations: | endurance sports biological and medical sciences |
| Tagging: | Glykogen |
| Published in: | The Journal of Physiology |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
2020
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| Online Access: | https://doi.org/10.1113/JP280221 |
| Volume: | 599 |
| Issue: | 3 |
| Pages: | 771-790 |
| Document types: | article |
| Level: | advanced |