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Definition: "An ergogenic aid is any substance or phenomenon that enhances performance "
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15.01.2013 |
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Sulforaphane – a natural anticatabolic
If you train to the point of exhaustion you may benefit from taking a supplement containing sulforaphane, a compound that occurs naturally in brassica vegetables. According to an animal study published by biochemists at the Alma Mater Studiorum Universita di Bologna in the Journal of Applied Physiology, sulforaphane protects muscle cells during extreme exertion.
Most nutritionists regard sulforaphane as a substance that boosts the activity of endogenous antioxidants. Epidemiologists suspect that sulforaphane is part of the reason why people who eat large amount of cabbage-related vegetables are several tens of percent less likely to cancer than people who never eat brassicas. [Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 1996 Sep; 5(9): 733-48.]
A diet that is rich in cabbage-related vegetables eliminates aggressive compounds and therefore prevents healthy cells from turning into cancer c ells. The Italian study that this posting is about takes the same view as the epidemiological studies.
The researchers gave rats a daily portion of 25 mg sulforaphane per kg bodyweight for three days, injecting it directly into the rats' gut. A control group was given no active substances.
After three days of supplementation the researchers got half of the rats in the control group and half of the rats in the sulforaphane group to run to the point of exhaustion. Then the Italians studied the rats' muscles and blood.
So there were four groups of test animals in total: group C didn't run and had no sulforaphane; group E ran and didn't get sulforaphane either; group S didn't run but were given sulforaphane; group ES ran and were given sulforaphane too.
The researchers found less malondialdehyde – an indicator of damage from free radicals – and more antioxidant activity in the muscles in the ES group than in the E group. Moreover the researchers found higher levels of the antioxidant enzymes glutathione-S-transferase and glutathione-reductase in the muscles of the ES group than in those of the E group.
If these effects also occur in humans, then sulforaphane supplementation is an interesting prospect for athletes. Sulforaphane may speed up muscle recovery or make it possible to perform more intensive workouts. One problem is dosage. The human equivalent of the dose used in the experiment is extreme: 200-400 mg per day. You'll find how to calculate the dose here.
"Further studies are needed to define whether sulforaphane oral administration through dietary supplements is also able to exert similar protective effects", the Italians write. "We are now evaluating, in a rat model, this possibility through the dietary administration of sulforaphane-enriched extracts."
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