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. 2021 Nov 16;9(11):154. doi: 10.3390/sports9110154

Table 5.

Dietary supplement application in wheelchair athletes adapted from Broad et al. (2019) [6].

Supplement Author Dosage Protocol Outcome
Caffeine Flueck, Mettler and Perret [74] 6 mg per kg body mass caffeine
0.5 g per kg body mass sodium citrate
120 min (sodium citrate) and 60 min (caffeine) before a test
9 wheelchair athletes
(6 male, 3 female)
4 × 1500 m time trial on wheelchair training roller (placebo, caffeine, sodium citrate, sodium citrate + caffeine)
No significant difference in performance
Flueck, Lienert, Schaufelberger, Krebs and Perret [75] 6 mg per kg body mass caffeine, 60 min before the test 17 AB, 10 PA, 7 tetraplegic (all recreationally active)
3 min all-out test at arm crank ergometer
Significant higher power output first 30 and 60 s (in AB and PA), average power output over 3 min not significantly altered
Graham-Paulson, Perret, Watson and Goosey-Tolfrey [76] 4 mg per kg body mass caffeine, 70 min before the test 12 wheelchair rugby players
4 × 4 min plus 3 × 3× 20 m sprint
Significantly faster sprint performance
Graham-Paulson, Perret and Goosey-Tolfrey [77] 2, 4 and 6 mg per kg body mass caffeine
Vs. placebo
Case study: 1 para-triathlete
20 km time trial
TT performance increased by 2, 1.7, and 2.5% compared to the placebo
Vitamin D Flueck, Schlaepfer and Perret [78] 6000 IU Vitamin D3 over 12 weeks followed by 12 weeks of placebo ingestion 20 indoor wheelchair athletes (basketball and rugby);
Wingate test
Isometric strength test
Significantly increased vitamin D status; no significant difference in Wingate performance, a significant increase in isometric strength in the non-dominant arm
Pritchett, Pritchett Stark, Broad and LaCroix [79] <50 nmol/L: 50,000 IU/week for 8 weeks
50–75 nmol/L: 35,000 IU/week for 4 weeks
Maintenance 15,000 IU/week
>75 nmol/L: 15,000 IU/week
34 wheelchair athletes
Handgrip strength
20 m sprint performance
91% of the athletes showed a sufficient vitamin D status, a significant increase in handgrip strength
No change in sprint performance
Beetroot juice Flueck, Gallo, Moelijker, Bogdanov, Bogdanova and Perret [80] 6 mmol beetroot juice or sodium nitrate or water (placebo) 8 handcyclists (category H2 to H4)
10 km time trial
Significant increase in plasma nitrate and nitrite concentrations, no significant effect on time to complete the trial
Creatine monohydrate Perret, Mueller and Knecht [81] 4 × 5 g/day for 6 days 6 wheelchair athletes (4 male, 2 female)
800 m time trial
No significant differences in performance, lactate concentration, and heart rate
Jacobs, Mahoney, Cohn, Sheradsky and Green [82] 4 × 5 g/day for 7 days 16 untrained patients with a chronic tetraplegia
VO2peak test at the arm-crank ergometer
Significant increase in VO2peak (+17.4%) and peak power (+6.7%)
Carbohydrate Spendiff and Campbell [61] 600 mL of a low (4%) and a high (11%) carbohydrate drink, 20 min before exercise 8 male wheelchair athletes; 1 h exercise at 65% VO2peak followed by 20 min time trial The tendency for a greater performance
Fish-oil Marques et al. [83] 3 g fish oil (1500 mg
DHA, 300 mg EPA) per day for 30 days
8 male wheelchair basketball players; inflammation markers before and after exercise Reduced markers of muscle damage, inflammatory disturbances, and neutrophil death

Note: AB = able-bodied, PA = paraplegic participant.