Caffeine's influence on vertical jump height: a real-life collegiate student-athlete approach.

IF 4.5 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Zacharias Papadakis, Vassilios Panoutsakopoulos, Antonella Schwarz, Jose Antonio
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Caffeine's ergogenic potential in vertical jumping remains contested, particularly at dosages compliant with collegiate athletic regulations. The NCAA enforces a caffeine urinary threshold equivalent to ~5 mg/kg body mass, yet evidence supporting its efficacy in enhancing explosive performance among trained athletes is inconsistent. This study examined whether acute caffeine ingestion at this threshold improves squat jump (SJ) and countermovement jump (CMJ) performance in NCAA Division II student-athletes, while exploring sex-specific responses and trial-to-trial variability.

Methods: Forty NCAA Division II athletes (18 females, 22 males; 21.3 ± 2.4 years) participated in a single-blind, randomized, crossover trial. Participants ingested 5 mg/kg caffeine or placebo, followed by SJ and CMJ testing on a force platform 60 minutes post-consumption. Three trials per jump type were retained to preserve intra-individual variance. Linear mixed-effects models (LMMs) assessed fixed effects of condition, sex, and trials, with random intercepts and slopes accounting for individual variability. A priori power analyses guided sample size determination, targeting sensitivity to detect small-to-medium effects (Cohen's f ≥ 0.2).

Results: Caffeine elicited trivial, non-significant differences in SJ (β =  -0.24 cm, p = 0.646) and CMJ (β =  -0.71 cm, p = 0.183) heights compared to placebo. Males outperformed females in both SJ (Δ = 9.50 cm, p < 0.001) and CMJ (Δ = 11.30 cm, p < 0.001), though no condition-by-sex interactions emerged. Trial effects were observed, with SJ improving 2.31 cm (p < 0.001) and CMJ 1.05 cm (p = 0.014) from first to second attempts, suggesting warm-up or neuromuscular potentiation. High intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC = 0.76-0.85) underscored substantial interindividual variability. Models demonstrated robust fit (conditional R2 = 0.86-0.92), with sufficient power to detect medium-to-large effects (f ≥ 0.25).

Conclusions: A 5 mg/kg caffeine dose, compliant with NCAA thresholds, did not enhance vertical jump performance in habituated collegiate athletes, challenging prior assertions of its universal ergogenicity for ballistic tasks. While sex differences in baseline performance persisted, caffeine did not modulate these disparities, implicating neuromuscular and anthropometric factors as primary determinants. The absence of ergogenic effects aligns with NCAA safety-focused policies but highlights the need for personalized dosing strategies and research into higher doses, genetic variability, and hormonal influences. Future studies should integrate biomechanical metrics and controlled hormonal assessments to elucidate caffeine's nuanced role in anaerobic power sports.

咖啡因对垂直跳跃高度的影响:一个现实生活中的大学生运动员方法。
背景:咖啡因在垂直跳远中的促能潜力仍然存在争议,特别是在符合大学运动规定的剂量下。NCAA强制规定咖啡因尿阈值相当于~5毫克/公斤体重,但支持其在训练有素的运动员中提高爆发力的有效性的证据并不一致。本研究考察了在这个阈值下急性摄入咖啡因是否能提高NCAA II级学生运动员的深蹲跳(SJ)和反动作跳(CMJ)的表现,同时探索了性别特异性反应和试验间的可变性。方法:40名NCAA乙级运动员(女18名,男22名;(21.3±2.4岁)参加了一项单盲、随机、交叉试验。参与者摄入5 mg/kg咖啡因或安慰剂,随后在摄入后60分钟在力平台上进行SJ和CMJ测试。每种跳跃类型保留三个试验以保留个体内方差。线性混合效应模型(lmm)评估条件、性别和试验的固定效应,随机截距和斜率说明个体变异性。先验功率分析指导样本量的确定,目标灵敏度检测中小型效应(Cohen’s f≥0.2)。结果:与安慰剂相比,咖啡因引起的SJ (β = -0.24 cm, p = 0.646)和CMJ (β = -0.71 cm, p = 0.183)高度差异微不足道,无显著性差异。从第一次到第二次尝试,男性在两个SJ上的表现都优于女性(Δ = 9.50 cm, p p p p = 0.014),这表明热身或神经肌肉增强。高类内相关系数(ICC = 0.76-0.85)强调了大量的个体间变异性。模型显示了稳健的拟合(条件R2 = 0.86-0.92),有足够的能力检测到中大型效应(f≥0.25)。结论:符合NCAA阈值的5 mg/kg咖啡因剂量并没有提高习惯的大学运动员的垂直起跳表现,这挑战了之前关于其在弹道任务中具有普遍的运动力的断言。虽然基线表现的性别差异持续存在,但咖啡因并没有调节这些差异,暗示神经肌肉和人体测量因素是主要决定因素。不存在人体产生的效应与NCAA的安全政策一致,但强调了个性化剂量策略和研究高剂量、遗传变异和激素影响的必要性。未来的研究应该结合生物力学指标和控制激素评估来阐明咖啡因在无氧力量运动中的微妙作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition NUTRITION & DIETETICS-SPORT SCIENCES
CiteScore
8.80
自引率
3.90%
发文量
34
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition (JISSN) focuses on the acute and chronic effects of sports nutrition and supplementation strategies on body composition, physical performance and metabolism. JISSN is aimed at researchers and sport enthusiasts focused on delivering knowledge on exercise and nutrition on health, disease, rehabilitation, training, and performance. The journal provides a platform on which readers can determine nutritional strategies that may enhance exercise and/or training adaptations leading to improved health and performance.
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