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Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition logoLink to Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition
. 2012 Nov 19;9(Suppl 1):P15. doi: 10.1186/1550-2783-9-S1-P15

The effects of a caffeine-containing beverage on muscle explosiveness during ballistic bench throws

Emily Kammerer 1, Tyler Krings 1, Stephanie Wojton 1, Elizabeth Scheckel 1, Eric Kuklinski 1, Kelsey Jacobs 1, Carly Homan 1, Jenna Veldhuizen 1, Stephen Siegle 1, Amanda Wright 1, Meghan McCann 1, Dawn Anderson 1, Lonnie Lowery 1,
PMCID: PMC3500746

Background

There is limited information available regarding the effects of caffeine-containing drinks on high intensity exercise performance. We hypothesized that Redline® energy drink would significantly increase (p<0.05) muscle explosiveness in bench throws (BT) when compared to an identical placebo (PLB) in recreationally fit subjects (n=16).

Methods

After a day of dietary control and caffeine abstinence, otherwise fasted subjects performed four individual ballistic bench throws under two conditions (Redline®, PLB), with trials being separated by 48-96 hours. The peak force (FOR), peak power (POW), peak velocity (VEL), peak displacement (DSP), and maximum rate of force development (RFD) of the Redline® trial were compared to PLB.

Results

Early results suggest a significant increase in FOR (Redline® 329.6 ± 108.8 N vs. PLB 322.9 ± 107.1 N [p= 0.015]); POW (Redline® 468 ± 177 W vs. PLB 446 ± 175 W[p= 0.001]); and VEL (Redline® 1.82 ± 0.18 m/s vs. PLB 1.76 ± 0.19 m/s [p=0.0035]); and a trend in the data (p<0.10) for DSP (Redline® 0.92 ± 0.08 m vs. PLB 0.90 ± .10 m [p= .0665]); and RFD (Redline® 529 ± 262 N/s vs. PLB 493 ± 219 N/s [p=0.0685]).

Conclusions

These preliminary data supported our hypothesis that muscle explosiveness in the bench throw would increase under the influence of Redline® energy drink.


Articles from Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition are provided here courtesy of Taylor & Francis

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