Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10609/147724
Title: Beetroot juice ingestion does not improve neuromuscular performance and match-play demands in elite female hockey players: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study
Author: López Samanes, Álvaro  
Pérez-Lopez, Alberto
Morencos, Esther  
Muñoz, Alejandro  
Kühn, Adriaan P V  
Migallón, Violeta  
Moreno-Pérez, Víctor  
González-Frutos, Pablo  
Bach-Faig, Anna  
Roberts, Justin
Domínguez, Raúl
Others: Universidad Francisco de Vitoria
Universidad de Alcalá
Universidad Miguel Hernández
Universitat Oberta de Catalunya. Estudis de Ciències de la Salut
Anglia Ruskin University
Universidad de Sevilla
Citation: López-Samanes, A. [Álvaro], Pérez-López, A. [Alberto], Morencos, E. [Esther], Muñoz, A. [Alejandro], Kühn, A. [Adriaan], Sánchez-Migallón, V. [Violeta], Moreno-Pérez, V. [Víctor], González-Frutos, P. [Pablo], Bach Faig, A. [Anna], Roberts, J. [Justin] & Domínguez, R. [Raúl] (2023). Beetroot juice ingestion does not improve neuromuscular performance and match-play demands in elite female hockey players: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. European Journal of Nutrition, 62, 1123-1130. doi: 10.1007/s00394-022-03052-1
Abstract: Purpose: Beetroot juice is a dietary supplement that contains high levels of inorganic nitrate (NO3-) and that its intake has proven effective at increasing blood nitric oxide (NO) concentrations improving endurance performance. However, the effect of this supplement in team sport performance, especially in female athletes, has been barely studied. This study aimed to compare the acute effects of beetroot juice supplementation on neuromuscular performance and match-play demands in elite female field hockey players. Methods: Eleven elite female hockey players (22.8 ± 5.1 years) belonging to a bronze team medal in Eurohockey Club Champions Cup participated in this study. Participants were randomly divided into two groups undergoing a test battery with beetroot juice (70 mL, 6.4 mmol NO3−) or placebo (70 mL, 0.04 mmol NO3−) in two different days with one week between protocols. The neuromuscular test battery consisted of a countermovement jump, isometric handgrip strength (i.e., dominant hand), 20 m-sprint and repeated sprint ability test (RSA). Afterward, a simulated hockey match play (2 × 12.5 min) was performed and recorded by Global Positioning System (GPS). Results: No statistically significant improvements were observed in any physical parameters analysed comparing beetroot juice compared to placebo ingestion, countermovement jump (p = 0.776, ES = 0.16), isometric handgrip strength (p = 0.829; ES = – 0.08), 20 m sprint test (p = 0.227; ES = – 0.23), mean repeated sprint ability (p = 0.955, ES = 0.03) and in any physical match demands measured by GPS (p = 0.243–1.000; ES = 0.02–0.47). Conclusion: Acute beetroot juice supplementation did not produce any statistically significant improvement in neuromuscular performance or match-play demands in elite female field hockey players. Trial registration: The study was registered in ClinicalTrials.gov with the following ID: NCT05209139. The study was retrospectively registered by 26 January 2022.
Keywords: team-sports
female
dietary supplements
nitrates
Document type: info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Version: info:eu-repo/semantics/acceptedVersion
Issue Date: 19-Nov-2022
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