Caffeine Gets You to the Finish Line Faster

Summary: Caffeine supplementation reduces sprint time in a 100-meter dash, a new study reports.

Source: Ritsumeikan University

At the international level of sport, even the smallest advantage can take an athlete from being a mere participant to a podium finisher. Consequently, athletes try to achieve that competitive edge with the help of performance-enhancing training methods and pre-event performance-enhancing aids.

Caffeine, a nervous system stimulant, is one such performance-enhancing aid, most commonly and popularly used by athletes around the world. In fact, the International Association of Athletics Federations(now called World Athletics, WA) recommends caffeine as an ergogenic (or physical performance-enhancing) aid in a consensus statement of nutritional strategy for athletics.

However, owing to the absence of research on caffeine’s effects on sprint performance, the recommendation is reflective of evidence from other anaerobic sports rather than sprint running in athletics, like the 100-m sprint event.

To advance research, a team of researchers from Japan investigated the acute effects of caffeine supplementation on sprint running performance. This study, led by Professor Takeshi Hashimoto from Ritsumeikan University in Japan, was subsequently published in the Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise journal.

According to Prof. Hashimoto, “While previous studies have investigated the effects of caffeine on running activity, evidence from these studies is not conclusive enough to support the World Athletics consensus. A majority of them have looked at its effects on single sprint runs of less than 60 meters. Therefore, it was important to study the ergogenic effects of caffeine on the 100-meter sprint performance.”

The researchers recruited 13 male collegiate sprinters for the study. In a preliminary test, the researchers determined the time it takes for each athlete to reach peak blood plasma caffeine concentration after ingesting it. Taking this into account, the athletes were called two more times for 100-meter time trials after ingesting either caffeine or placebo supplements.

As measures of performance, the researchers measured the sprint velocity and calculated the sprint time. On discounting the effects of environmental factors, the corrected sprint time was used to examine the effects of caffeine supplementation.

This shows people running a race
The results revealed that the corrected 100-m sprint time was shortened significantly for athletes who received caffeine, with a decrease of 0.14 seconds compared to the controls. Image is in the public domain

The results revealed that the corrected 100-m sprint time was shortened significantly for athletes who received caffeine, with a decrease of 0.14 seconds compared to the controls. This decrease in the time was largely associated with a decrease in sprint time for the first 60 meters of the sprint.

The researchers also found that the mean sprint velocity for the 0–10 m and 10–20 m splits was significantly higher in the athletes who received caffeine. Moreover, no significant difference was seen in the sprint time for the last 40 meters of the sprint, despite the shortening of the sprint time in the first 60 meters.

Together, these observations suggest that the caffeine supplementation provided more explosive acceleration to the sprinters in the early stage of the race.

In the long term, these results could translate to the enhancement of sports performance for athletes by enhancing the usage of caffeine as an ergogenic aid during sprints.

“The insights gained from this study have given us the first direct evidence of caffeine’s ergogenicity on sprint running in athletics. This also serves as evidence to directly support the recommendations for caffeine usage by World Athletics. The study thus provides one more advantage that athletes can use to inch themselves closer towards victory”, concludes Prof. Hashimoto.

Determined to explore the ergogenic effects of caffeine further, Prof. Hashimoto and his team intend to call to question the mechanisms behind the effects of caffeine on ballistic actions such as sprinting and jumping.

Funding: This study was supported by Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (grant no. 21H03384 to T. H.).

About this neuroscience research news

Author: Kazuki Kurajo
Source: Ritsumeikan University
Contact: Kazuki Kurajo – Ritsumeikan University
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Closed access.
Acute Effect of Caffeine Supplementation on 100-m Sprint Running Performance: A Field Test” by Takeshi Hashimoto et al. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise


Abstract

Acute Effect of Caffeine Supplementation on 100-m Sprint Running Performance: A Field Test

Purpose 

No study has assessed the acute effect of caffeine supplementation on 100-m sprint running in athletics, and caffeine’s net ergogenicity on 100-m sprint running remains unclear. We investigated the acute effects of caffeine supplementation on 100-m sprint running performance in a field test.

Methods 

Thirteen male collegiate sprinters were subjected to 100-m sprint running time trials (TTs) after the ingestion of 6 mg·kg-1 body weight caffeine or placebo supplementation in a double-blind, counterbalanced, randomized, and crossover design. Sprint velocity was measured with a laser system, and sprint time was calculated from the data in which the effects of environmental factors that would act as confounding factors on sprint time during TTs were eliminated.

Results 

The corrected 100-m sprint time was significantly shortened by 0.14 sec with caffeine supplementation compared with placebo (placebo: 11.40 ± 0.39 sec, caffeine: 11.26 ± 0.33 sec, P = 0.007, g = -0.33). The corrected sprint time up to 60 m during TTs was also significantly shorter with caffeine supplementation than with placebo (P = 0.002). Furthermore, the mean sprint velocity for 0-10 and 10-20 m splits was significantly increased by caffeine supplementation (all P < 0.05).

Conclusions 

Acute caffeine supplementation enhanced the corrected 100-m sprint time by improving the sprint performance in the first 60 m following more explosive acceleration in the early stage of the acceleration phase. Thus, for the first time, we directly demonstrated caffeine’s ergogenicity on 100-m sprint performance in athletics.

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