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. 2016 Oct 11;2:41. doi: 10.1186/s40798-016-0065-9

Table 1.

A summary of studies conducted in the mid 1980’s that reported an ergogenic effect of 0.3 g kg−1 sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) supplementation on performance tasks lasting approximately −7 min

Study Subject characteristics Task Control NaHCO3 Improvement (%)
Wilkes et al. ‘83 [36] University track athletes 800-m foot race 2:05.8 ± 2.1 (min:s) 2:02.9 ± 1.9 (min:s) ~2 %
Costill et al. ‘84 [40] VO2max: 4.8 L min−1 (3.12–6.33) 5, 1-min cycling bouts (125 % VO2max; 5th bout to exhaustion) 113.5 ± 12.4 s 160.8 ± 19.1 s ~42 %
McKenzie et al. ‘86 [38] VO2max: 3.83 ± 0.61 L min−1 6, 60-s cycling bouts (125 % VO2max; 6th bout to exhaustion) 74.7 ± 17.6 s 106 ± 6.9 s ~30 %
Gao et al. ‘86 [37] Well-trained college swimmers (VO2max: 4.3 ± 0.1 L min−1) 5, 100-yd freestyle swim 4th bout: ~1.65 m s−1
5th bout: ~1.64 m s−1
4th bout: ~1.62 m s−1
5th bout: ~1.61 m s−1
~2 %
~2 %
Goldfinch et al. ‘88 [39] Male athletes 400-m foot race 58.46 ± 2.49 s 56.94 ± 2.25 s ~3 %

Subject characteristics are represented to the level of detail provided in the original published studies. All values in the (%) improvement column were significantly different from control (p < 0.05)