Dietary Supplements for Exercise and Athletic Performance
Manufacturers and sellers promote these products, sometimes referred to as “ergogenic aids,” by claiming that they improve strength or endurance, increase exercise efficiency, achieve a performance goal more quickly, and increase tolerance for more intense training. These effects are the main focus of this fact sheet. Some people also use ergogenic aids to prepare the body for exercise, reduce the chance of injury during training, and enhance recovery from exercise.
Dietary supplements to enhance exercise and athletic performance come in a variety of forms, including tablets, capsules, liquids, powders, and bars. Many of these products contain numerous ingredients in varied combinations and amounts. Among the more common ingredients are amino acids, protein, creatine, and caffeine.
A few dietary supplements might enhance performance only when they add to, but do not substitute for, this dietary foundation. Athletes engaging in endurance activities lasting more than an hour or performed in extreme environments (e.g., hot temperatures or high altitudes) might need to replace lost fluids and electrolytes and consume additional carbohydrates for energy. Even with proper nutritional preparation, the results of taking any dietary supplement(s) for exercise and athletic performance vary by level of training; the nature, intensity, and duration of the activity; and the environmental conditions
elected Ingredients in Dietary Supplements for Exercise and Athletic Performance
Many exercise and athletic-performance dietary supplements in the marketplace contain multiple ingredients (especially those marketed for muscle growth and strength). However, much of the research has focused only on single ingredients. One therefore cannot know or predict the effects and safety of combinations in these multi-ingredient products unless clinical trials have investigated that particular combination. Furthermore, the amounts of these ingredients vary widely among products. In some cases, the products contain proprietary blends of ingredients listed in order by weight, but labels do not provide the amount of each ingredient in the blend. Manufacturers and sellers of dietary supplements for exercise and athletic performance rarely fund or conduct scientific research on their proprietary products of a caliber that reputable biomedical journals require for publication.
Table 1 briefly summarizes the findings discussed in more detail in this fact sheet on the safety and efficacy of selected ingredients in dietary supplements to enhance exercise and athletic performance. Some research-derived data is available on these ingredients on which to base a judgment about their potential value to aid exercise and athletic performance. These dietary supplement ingredients are listed and discussed in the table, and in the text that follows the table, in alphabetical order.
Table 1: Selected Ingredients in Dietary Supplements for Exercise and Athletic Performance* |
|||
Ingredient |
Proposed Mechanism of Action |
Evidence of Efficacy** |
Evidence of Safety** |
Minimize free-radical damage to skeletal muscle, thereby reducing muscle fatigue, inflammation, and soreness |
Several small clinical trials |
Safe at recommended intakes; some safety concerns reported with high
doses |
|
Increases blood flow and delivery of oxygen and nutrients to skeletal muscle; serves as a substrate for creatine production; increases secretion of human growth hormone to stimulate muscle growth |
Limited clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for use of up to 9 g/day for weeks;
adverse effects possible with larger doses |
|
Dilates blood vessels in exercising muscle, reduces oxygen use, and improves energy production |
Limited clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for short-term use at commonly recommended
amounts (approximately 2 cups) |
|
Increases synthesis of carnosine, a dipeptide that buffers changes in muscle pH, thereby reducing muscle fatigue and loss of force production; considerable individual variation in associated muscle carnosine synthesis |
Numerous clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for use of 1.6–6.4 g/day for up to 8 weeks |
|
Helps stressed and damaged skeletal muscle cells restore their structure and function |
Numerous clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for typical dose of 3 g/day for up to 2
months |
|
Might increase creatine production, blood nitric-acid levels, or water retention in cells |
Limited clinical trials in men with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for 2–5 g/day for up to 15 days |
|
Branched-chain amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, and valine) |
Can be metabolized by mitochondria in skeletal muscle to provide energy during exercise |
Limited number of short-term clinical trials |
No safety concerns reported for 20 g/day or less for up to 6 weeks |
Blocks activity of the neuromodulator adenosine; reduces perceived pain and exertion |
Numerous clinical trials with mostly consistent results |
Reasonably safe at up to 400–500 mg/day for adults |
|
Dilates blood vessels to increase delivery of oxygen and nutrients to skeletal muscle |
Few clinical trials with conflicting results |
Few safety concerns reported for up to 9 g for 1 day or 6 g/day for up
to 16 days |
|
Helps supply muscles with energy for short-term, predominantly anaerobic activity |
Numerous clinical trials generally showing a benefit for
high-intensity, intermittent activity; potential variation in individual
responses |
Few safety concerns reported at typical dose (e.g., loading dose of 20
g/day for up to 7 days and 3–5 g/day for up to 12 weeks) |
|
Contains growth factors (such as insulin-like growth factor-1 [IGF-1]) that could promote muscle tissue growth |
Few short-term clinical trials that show no benefit for physical
performance |
Safety not well studied |
|
Steroid hormone that can be converted into testosterone and estradiol |
Small number of clinical trials that show no benefit for physical
performance |
Safety not well studied; no safety concerns reported for up to 150
mg/day for 6–12 weeks |
|
Unknown mechanism of action; Panax ginseng used in traditional Chinese medicine as a tonic for stamina and vitality; Siberian ginseng used to reduce fatigue |
Numerous small clinical trials, most showing no benefit for physical
performance |
Few safety concerns reported with short-term use |
|
Involved in metabolism and energy production; contributes nitrogen for many critical biochemical reactions |
Few studies of use to enhance performance directly |
No safety concerns reported with about 45 g/day for 6 weeks; safe use
of up to 0.42 g/kg body weight (e.g., 30 g/day in a person weighing 154 lb)
by many patients with serious conditions (e.g., infections, intestinal
diseases, and burns) |
|
Increases oxygen uptake, reduces heart rate, and decreases lactate concentrations during exercise |
Numerous clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for use at recommended intakes (8 mg/day
for healthy men and postmenopausal women and 18 mg/day for healthy
premenopausal women) |
|
Builds, maintains, and repairs muscle |
Numerous clinical trials |
No safety concerns reported at daily recommended intakes for athletes
of up to about 2.0 g/kg body weight (e.g., 136 g for a person weighing 150
lb) |
|
Increases mitochondria in muscle, reduces oxidative stress, decreases inflammation, and improves blood flow |
Numerous small, short-term clinical trials |
No safety concerns reported for 1,000 mg/day or less for up to 8 weeks |
|
Involved in production of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) |
A few small, short-term, clinical trials |
Safety as a dietary supplement not well studied; no safety concerns
reported for up to 10 g/day for 8 weeks |
|
Enhances disposal of hydrogen ions generated from intense muscle activity, thereby reducing metabolic acidosis and resulting fatigue |
Many small, short-term clinical trials |
No safety concerns reported for short-term use of up to 300 mg/kg body
weight |
|
Phytochemicals in tart cherries may facilitate exercise recovery by reducing pain and inflammation |
A few clinical trials with conflicting results |
No safety concerns reported for about 1/2 quart of juice or 480 mg
freeze-dried Montmorency tart-cherry-skin powder per day for up to 2 weeks |
|
Increases serum testosterone and luteinizing hormone concentrations, thereby promoting skeletal muscle hypertrophy |
A few small, short-term clinical trials |
Safety not well studied; no safety concerns reported at up to 3.21
mg/kg/day for 8 weeks |
* References to support statements in Table 1 are provided in subsequent
text.
** The evidence of efficacy and safety is for the individual ingredients. The
efficacy and safety of these ingredients might be different when they are
combined with other ingredients in a product or training plan.
Safety Considerations
Like all dietary supplements, supplements used to enhance exercise and athletic performance can have side effects and might interact with prescription and over-the-counter medications. In some cases, the active constituents of botanical or other ingredients promoted as ergogenic aids are unknown or uncharacterized. Furthermore, many such products contain multiple ingredients that have not been adequately tested in combination with one another. People interested in taking dietary supplements to enhance their exercise and athletic performance should talk with their healthcare providers about the use of these products.
The Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences and the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency maintain a list of products marketed as dietary supplements that contain stimulants, steroids, hormone- like ingredients, controlled substances, or unapproved drugs and that can have health risks for warfighters and others who take them for bodybuilding or other forms of physical performance.
Interactions with medications
Some ingredients in dietary supplements used to enhance exercise and athletic performance can interact with certain medications. For example, intakes of large doses of antioxidant supplements, such as vitamins C and E, during cancer chemotherapy or radiotherapy could reduce the effectiveness of these therapies by inhibiting cellular oxidative damage in cancerous cells. Ginseng can reduce the anticoagulant effects of the blood thinner warfarin (Coumadin or Jantoven). Iron supplements can reduce the bioavailability of levodopa (used to treat Parkinson’s disease) and levothyroxine (Levothyroid, Levoxyl, Synthroid, and others, for hypothyroidism and goiter), so users should take iron supplements at a different time of the day than these two drugs. Cimetidine (Tagamet HB, used to treat duodenal ulcers) can slow the rate of caffeine clearance from the body and thereby increase the risk of adverse effects from caffeine consumption.
Individuals taking dietary supplements and medications on a regular basis should discuss the use of these products with their healthcare providers.
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