Branched-chainα-amino acid chronic treatment: responses of plasmaα-keto-related compounds and ammonia when used in physical exercise performance
To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n = 12) was submitted to a one month chronic BCAA treatment (0.2g/Kg body weight per die; Leu: Val: Ileu = 2:1:1) and a physical exercise test...
Saved in:
Published in | Amino acids Vol. 10; no. 4; pp. 317 - 332 |
---|---|
Main Authors | , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Austria
01.12.1996
|
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0939-4451 1438-2199 |
DOI | 10.1007/BF00805860 |
Cover
Loading…
Abstract | To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n = 12) was submitted to a one month chronic BCAA treatment (0.2g/Kg body weight per die; Leu: Val: Ileu = 2:1:1) and a physical exercise test before and after this period of treatment was carried out. The exercise tests (60min swim) were performed in a high circulating BCAA level state which was obtained through oral BCAA administration (or placebo) just before the beginning of the exercise. The groups will be referred to as BCAA/before, BCAA/after, placebo/before, placebo/after. Blood and plasma (antecubital vein) samples were collected from the different groups at different times: on the morning of the day before the test (basal time, rest 0), the following day 30min after an acute administration (oral dose placebo or BCAA acute treatment: Leu 4.8g, Val 2.4g, Ileu 2.4g), just before the beginning of the exercise performance (time 0min, rest 1), at the end of the exercise (time 60min, EE) and during recovery (time 120min, Re). Plasma ammonia levels increased significantly from rest 1 to the end of the exercise in all subjects, but it was significantly higher in BCAA treated than in placebo subjects in both the before and after chronic treatment groups (BCAA/before: from 38 ± 7 to 204 ± 65mmol/l; placebo/before: from 36 ± 10 to 93 ± 29mmol/l; BCAA/after: from 36 ± 9 to 171 ± 43mmol/l; placebo/after: from 30 ± 6 to 65 ± 16mmol/l). Plasma ammonia level increments observed before a chronic one month BCAA treatment were significantly higher than after this treatment (p < 0.05). Plasma alanine was at all times of the test higher before the BCAA chronic treatment than after; this difference resulted significant at rest 0, rest 1 and recovery times (p < 0.05). After acute BCAA administration, plasma BCAA levels increased from 618 ± 52mmol/l to 1893 ± 284mmol/l (p < 0.05) from the onset of exercise and remained elevated throughout the test. Placebo and basal (rest 0) levels both before and after the chronic treatment did not demonstrate any significant differences. Plasma BCAA and BCKA levels, in the BCAA/before demonstrated significantly higher levels than placebo/before at rest 1 time (BCAA/before vs placebo/before: Leu 86 ± 27 vs 620 ± 97mmol/l; KIC 60 ± 3 vs 87 ± 5mmol/l, Ileu 51 ± 19 vs 359 ± 56mmol/l, KMV 26 ± 1 vs 43 ± 2mmol/l, Val 290 ± 79 vs 915 ± 133mmol/l, KIV 14 ± 1 vs 24 ± 2mmol/l). The levels after the chronic treatment maintained circa these differences in the two groups BCAA/after and placebo/after. The plasma BCAA as well as the BCKA levels of acutely treated athletes, in physical exercise, showed a different profile before and after the chronic treatment. The chronic treated BCAA/after group in fact depicted a decreasing BCKA level profile at the end of the exercise and during recovery; on the contrary, before the chronic treatments, acutely treated athletes demonstrated a tendency to increase these levels during recovery. These data seem to confirm that increased BCAA availability, before exercise, result in significantly greater plasma ammonia responses during exercise than does placebo administration; furthermore this increment is lower after chronic treatment. The interpretation of the ammonia data is difficult since the exercise type could have an influence on this phenomenon. The differences in the profile patterns of alanine, BCAA and BCKA levels seem to indicate that the chronic treatment brings about a state in which there is a better use of BCAA compounds as energy supply. |
---|---|
AbstractList | To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n = 12) was submitted to a one month chronic BCAA treatment (0.2g/Kg body weight per die; Leu: Val: Ileu = 2:1:1) and a physical exercise test before and after this period of treatment was carried out. The exercise tests (60min swim) were performed in a high circulating BCAA level state which was obtained through oral BCAA administration (or placebo) just before the beginning of the exercise. The groups will be referred to as BCAA/before, BCAA/after, placebo/before, placebo/after. Blood and plasma (antecubital vein) samples were collected from the different groups at different times: on the morning of the day before the test (basal time, rest 0), the following day 30min after an acute administration (oral dose placebo or BCAA acute treatment: Leu 4.8g, Val 2.4g, Ileu 2.4g), just before the beginning of the exercise performance (time 0min, rest 1), at the end of the exercise (time 60min, EE) and during recovery (time 120min, Re). Plasma ammonia levels increased significantly from rest 1 to the end of the exercise in all subjects, but it was significantly higher in BCAA treated than in placebo subjects in both the before and after chronic treatment groups (BCAA/before: from 38 ± 7 to 204 ± 65mmol/l; placebo/before: from 36 ± 10 to 93 ± 29mmol/l; BCAA/after: from 36 ± 9 to 171 ± 43mmol/l; placebo/after: from 30 ± 6 to 65 ± 16mmol/l). Plasma ammonia level increments observed before a chronic one month BCAA treatment were significantly higher than after this treatment (p < 0.05). Plasma alanine was at all times of the test higher before the BCAA chronic treatment than after; this difference resulted significant at rest 0, rest 1 and recovery times (p < 0.05). After acute BCAA administration, plasma BCAA levels increased from 618 ± 52mmol/l to 1893 ± 284mmol/l (p < 0.05) from the onset of exercise and remained elevated throughout the test. Placebo and basal (rest 0) levels both before and after the chronic treatment did not demonstrate any significant differences. Plasma BCAA and BCKA levels, in the BCAA/before demonstrated significantly higher levels than placebo/before at rest 1 time (BCAA/before vs placebo/before: Leu 86 ± 27 vs 620 ± 97mmol/l; KIC 60 ± 3 vs 87 ± 5mmol/l, Ileu 51 ± 19 vs 359 ± 56mmol/l, KMV 26 ± 1 vs 43 ± 2mmol/l, Val 290 ± 79 vs 915 ± 133mmol/l, KIV 14 ± 1 vs 24 ± 2mmol/l). The levels after the chronic treatment maintained circa these differences in the two groups BCAA/after and placebo/after. The plasma BCAA as well as the BCKA levels of acutely treated athletes, in physical exercise, showed a different profile before and after the chronic treatment. The chronic treated BCAA/after group in fact depicted a decreasing BCKA level profile at the end of the exercise and during recovery; on the contrary, before the chronic treatments, acutely treated athletes demonstrated a tendency to increase these levels during recovery. These data seem to confirm that increased BCAA availability, before exercise, result in significantly greater plasma ammonia responses during exercise than does placebo administration; furthermore this increment is lower after chronic treatment. The interpretation of the ammonia data is difficult since the exercise type could have an influence on this phenomenon. The differences in the profile patterns of alanine, BCAA and BCKA levels seem to indicate that the chronic treatment brings about a state in which there is a better use of BCAA compounds as energy supply. To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n = 12) was submitted to a one month chronic BCAA treatment (0.2g/Kg body weight per die; Leu: Val: Ileu = 2:1:1) and a physical exercise test before and after this period of treatment was carried out. The exercise tests (60min swim) were performed in a high circulating BCAA level state which was obtained through oral BCAA administration (or placebo) just before the beginning of the exercise. The groups will be referred to as BCAA/before, BCAA/after, placebo/before, placebo/after. Blood and plasma (antecubital vein) samples were collected from the different groups at different times: on the morning of the day before the test (basal time, rest 0), the following day 30min after an acute administration (oral dose placebo or BCAA acute treatment: Leu 4.8g, Val 2.4g, Ileu 2.4g), just before the beginning of the exercise performance (time 0min, rest 1), at the end of the exercise (time 60min, EE) and during recovery (time 120min, Re). Plasma ammonia levels increased significantly from rest 1 to the end of the exercise in all subjects, but it was significantly higher in BCAA treated than in placebo subjects in both the before and after chronic treatment groups (BCAA/before: from 38 ± 7 to 204 ± 65mmol/l; placebo/before: from 36 ± 10 to 93 ± 29mmol/l; BCAA/after: from 36 ± 9 to 171 ± 43mmol/l; placebo/after: from 30 ± 6 to 65 ± 16mmol/l). Plasma ammonia level increments observed before a chronic one month BCAA treatment were significantly higher than after this treatment (p < 0.05). Plasma alanine was at all times of the test higher before the BCAA chronic treatment than after; this difference resulted significant at rest 0, rest 1 and recovery times (p < 0.05). After acute BCAA administration, plasma BCAA levels increased from 618 ± 52mmol/l to 1893 ± 284mmol/l (p < 0.05) from the onset of exercise and remained elevated throughout the test. Placebo and basal (rest 0) levels both before and after the chronic treatment did not demonstrate any significant differences. Plasma BCAA and BCKA levels, in the BCAA/before demonstrated significantly higher levels than placebo/before at rest 1 time (BCAA/before vs placebo/before: Leu 86 ± 27 vs 620 ± 97mmol/l; KIC 60 ± 3 vs 87 ± 5mmol/l, Ileu 51 ± 19 vs 359 ± 56mmol/l, KMV 26 ± 1 vs 43 ± 2mmol/l, Val 290 ± 79 vs 915 ± 133mmol/l, KIV 14 ± 1 vs 24 ± 2mmol/l). The levels after the chronic treatment maintained circa these differences in the two groups BCAA/after and placebo/after. The plasma BCAA as well as the BCKA levels of acutely treated athletes, in physical exercise, showed a different profile before and after the chronic treatment. The chronic treated BCAA/after group in fact depicted a decreasing BCKA level profile at the end of the exercise and during recovery; on the contrary, before the chronic treatments, acutely treated athletes demonstrated a tendency to increase these levels during recovery. These data seem to confirm that increased BCAA availability, before exercise, result in significantly greater plasma ammonia responses during exercise than does placebo administration; furthermore this increment is lower after chronic treatment. The interpretation of the ammonia data is difficult since the exercise type could have an influence on this phenomenon. The differences in the profile patterns of alanine, BCAA and BCKA levels seem to indicate that the chronic treatment brings about a state in which there is a better use of BCAA compounds as energy supply.To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n = 12) was submitted to a one month chronic BCAA treatment (0.2g/Kg body weight per die; Leu: Val: Ileu = 2:1:1) and a physical exercise test before and after this period of treatment was carried out. The exercise tests (60min swim) were performed in a high circulating BCAA level state which was obtained through oral BCAA administration (or placebo) just before the beginning of the exercise. The groups will be referred to as BCAA/before, BCAA/after, placebo/before, placebo/after. Blood and plasma (antecubital vein) samples were collected from the different groups at different times: on the morning of the day before the test (basal time, rest 0), the following day 30min after an acute administration (oral dose placebo or BCAA acute treatment: Leu 4.8g, Val 2.4g, Ileu 2.4g), just before the beginning of the exercise performance (time 0min, rest 1), at the end of the exercise (time 60min, EE) and during recovery (time 120min, Re). Plasma ammonia levels increased significantly from rest 1 to the end of the exercise in all subjects, but it was significantly higher in BCAA treated than in placebo subjects in both the before and after chronic treatment groups (BCAA/before: from 38 ± 7 to 204 ± 65mmol/l; placebo/before: from 36 ± 10 to 93 ± 29mmol/l; BCAA/after: from 36 ± 9 to 171 ± 43mmol/l; placebo/after: from 30 ± 6 to 65 ± 16mmol/l). Plasma ammonia level increments observed before a chronic one month BCAA treatment were significantly higher than after this treatment (p < 0.05). Plasma alanine was at all times of the test higher before the BCAA chronic treatment than after; this difference resulted significant at rest 0, rest 1 and recovery times (p < 0.05). After acute BCAA administration, plasma BCAA levels increased from 618 ± 52mmol/l to 1893 ± 284mmol/l (p < 0.05) from the onset of exercise and remained elevated throughout the test. Placebo and basal (rest 0) levels both before and after the chronic treatment did not demonstrate any significant differences. Plasma BCAA and BCKA levels, in the BCAA/before demonstrated significantly higher levels than placebo/before at rest 1 time (BCAA/before vs placebo/before: Leu 86 ± 27 vs 620 ± 97mmol/l; KIC 60 ± 3 vs 87 ± 5mmol/l, Ileu 51 ± 19 vs 359 ± 56mmol/l, KMV 26 ± 1 vs 43 ± 2mmol/l, Val 290 ± 79 vs 915 ± 133mmol/l, KIV 14 ± 1 vs 24 ± 2mmol/l). The levels after the chronic treatment maintained circa these differences in the two groups BCAA/after and placebo/after. The plasma BCAA as well as the BCKA levels of acutely treated athletes, in physical exercise, showed a different profile before and after the chronic treatment. The chronic treated BCAA/after group in fact depicted a decreasing BCKA level profile at the end of the exercise and during recovery; on the contrary, before the chronic treatments, acutely treated athletes demonstrated a tendency to increase these levels during recovery. These data seem to confirm that increased BCAA availability, before exercise, result in significantly greater plasma ammonia responses during exercise than does placebo administration; furthermore this increment is lower after chronic treatment. The interpretation of the ammonia data is difficult since the exercise type could have an influence on this phenomenon. The differences in the profile patterns of alanine, BCAA and BCKA levels seem to indicate that the chronic treatment brings about a state in which there is a better use of BCAA compounds as energy supply. |
Author | Gatti, R. De Palo, E. F. Bigon, L. De Palo, C. B. Previti, O. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: E. F. surname: De Palo fullname: De Palo, E. F. – sequence: 2 givenname: R. surname: Gatti fullname: Gatti, R. – sequence: 3 givenname: L. surname: Bigon fullname: Bigon, L. – sequence: 4 givenname: O. surname: Previti fullname: Previti, O. – sequence: 5 givenname: C. B. surname: De Palo fullname: De Palo, C. B. |
BackLink | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24178593$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed |
BookMark | eNptkUFu1jAQRi1URP8WNhwAeYmQAmM7cRJ2tGoBqRKbdh3N74wVQ2wH21HpNbhJL8KZGtQCUsVqFvPep9F8R-wgxECMvRTwVgC0707OATpoOg1P2E7Uqquk6PsDtoNe9VVdN-KQHeX8FUDITuhn7FDWou2aXu3Yz5OEwUw0VmZCF37dVuhdiByNG7mZUgzO8JIIi6dQ3vNEeYkhU-bR8mXG7HFzvlGJVaIZC21W9Etcw5g5hpGj91sG8uuJAl_ztneBL9NNdgZnTj8oGZeJL5RsTH67hZ6zpxbnTC8e5jG7Oj-7PP1UXXz5-Pn0w0VlZNeUynaAgtAooffWSk1SdkboRioArds9WNQEraoVYQuECpt2HM1oDFgtSatj9vo-d0nx-0q5DN5lQ_OMgeKaB1HXnRSirZsNffWArntP47Ak5zHdDH_-uAFv7gGTYs6J7F9EwPC7pOFfSRsMj2DjChYXQ0no5v8pd3hEl1c |
CitedBy_id | crossref_primary_10_1016_j_scispo_2008_07_002 crossref_primary_10_1016_j_nut_2017_04_003 |
Cites_doi | 10.1007/BF00705093 10.1152/jappl.1990.69.1.1 10.1152/jappl.1991.70.5.2095 10.1055/s-2007-1024855 10.1152/jappl.1992.73.5.1986 10.1152/jappl.1993.74.6.2711 10.1139/y92-053 10.1152/jappl.1990.68.1.161 10.1002/dmr.5610050203 10.1097/00003246-199005000-00019 10.1016/S0378-4347(00)82004-6 10.1152/physrev.1992.72.2.419 10.1139/y87-323 10.1007/BF00863392 10.1093/ajcn/52.2.313 10.1139/y92-020 10.1016/S0021-9673(01)89028-2 10.1007/BF00805827 10.1007/BF02386181 10.1146/annurev.nu.04.070184.002205 10.1055/s-2007-1024861 |
ContentType | Journal Article |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION NPM 7X8 |
DOI | 10.1007/BF00805860 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
DatabaseTitleList | PubMed MEDLINE - Academic |
Database_xml | – sequence: 1 dbid: NPM name: PubMed url: https://proxy.k.utb.cz/login?url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=PubMed sourceTypes: Index Database |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Chemistry |
EISSN | 1438-2199 |
EndPage | 332 |
ExternalDocumentID | 24178593 10_1007_BF00805860 |
Genre | Journal Article |
GroupedDBID | --- -Y2 .86 .VR 06C 06D 0R~ 0VY 1SB 2.D 203 23M 28- 29~ 2J2 2JY 2KG 2KM 2LR 2P1 2VQ 2~H 30V 3SX 4.4 406 408 409 40D 40E 53G 5GY 5QI 5VS 67N 67Z 6NX 7X7 88E 8AO 8FE 8FG 8FH 8FI 8FJ 8TC 8UJ 95- 95. 95~ 96X AAAVM AABHQ AAHBH AAHNG AAIAL AAJKR AAJSJ AAKKN AANXM AANZL AARHV AARTL AASML AATVU AAUYE AAWCG AAYIU AAYQN AAYTO AAYXX AAYZH ABBBX ABBXA ABDBE ABDZT ABECU ABEEZ ABFSG ABFTV ABHLI ABHQN ABJCF ABJNI ABJOX ABKCH ABKTR ABMNI ABMQK ABNWP ABPLI ABQBU ABQSL ABSXP ABTEG ABTHY ABTKH ABTMW ABUWG ABWNU ABXPI ACACY ACBXY ACGFS ACHSB ACHXU ACIWK ACKNC ACMDZ ACMLO ACOKC ACOMO ACPRK ACSNA ACSTC ACULB ADBBV ADHHG ADHIR ADHKG ADIMF ADKNI ADKPE ADRFC ADTPH ADURQ ADYFF ADYPR ADZKW AEBTG AEFIE AEFQL AEGAL AEGNC AEJHL AEJRE AEKMD AENEX AEOHA AEPYU AESKC AETLH AEVLU AEXYK AEZWR AFBBN AFEXP AFGCZ AFGXO AFHIU AFKRA AFLOW AFQWF AFWTZ AFZKB AGAYW AGDGC AGGDS AGJBK AGMZJ AGQEE AGQMX AGQPQ AGRTI AGWIL AGWZB AGYKE AHAVH AHBYD AHKAY AHMBA AHPBZ AHSBF AHWEU AHYZX AIAKS AIIXL AILAN AITGF AIXLP AJBLW AJRNO AJZVZ AKMHD ALIPV ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS ALWAN AMKLP AMXSW AMYLF AMYQR AOCGG ARMRJ ASPBG AVWKF AXYYD AYFIA AZFZN B-. BA0 BBNVY BBWZM BDATZ BENPR BGLVJ BGNMA BHPHI BPHCQ BVXVI C24 C6C CAG CCPQU CITATION COF CS3 CSCUP D1I DDRTE DL5 DNIVK DPUIP EBD EBLON EBS EIOEI EJD EMOBN EN4 EPAXT ESBYG F5P FEDTE FERAY FFXSO FINBP FNLPD FRRFC FSGXE FWDCC FYUFA G-Y G-Z GGCAI GGRSB GJIRD GNWQR GQ7 GQ8 GROUPED_DOAJ GXS H13 HCIFZ HF~ HG5 HG6 HMCUK HMJXF HQYDN HRMNR HVGLF HZ~ I09 IHE IJ- IKXTQ IWAJR IXC IXD IXE IZIGR IZQ I~X I~Z J-C J0Z JBSCW JCJTX JZLTJ KB. KDC KOV KOW KPH LAS LK8 LLZTM M1P M4Y M7P MA- N2Q NB0 NDZJH NPVJJ NQJWS NU0 O9- O93 O9G O9I O9J OAM OVD P19 P2P PDBOC PF0 PHGZM PHGZT PQQKQ PROAC PSQYO PT5 QOK QOR QOS R4E R89 R9I RHV RIG RNI RNS ROL RPX RRX RSV RZK S16 S1Z S26 S27 S28 S3A S3B SAP SBL SBY SCLPG SDH SDM SHX SISQX SNE SNPRN SNX SOHCF SOJ SPISZ SRMVM SSLCW SSXJD STPWE SV3 SZN T13 T16 TEORI TSG TSK TSV TUC U2A U9L UG4 UKHRP UOJIU UTJUX UZXMN VC2 VFIZW W23 W48 W4F WJK WK6 WK8 YLTOR Z45 ZMTXR ZOVNA ~EX NPM PJZUB PPXIY PQGLB 7X8 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c285t-f80a1eac316bff26e228c1652300667b0fa6e07343ea70ea3a57ddcdcc0f62e63 |
ISSN | 0939-4451 |
IngestDate | Thu Sep 04 23:53:53 EDT 2025 Mon Jul 21 05:49:46 EDT 2025 Thu Apr 24 23:12:17 EDT 2025 Tue Jul 01 01:06:06 EDT 2025 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 4 |
Language | English |
License | http://www.springer.com/tdm |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c285t-f80a1eac316bff26e228c1652300667b0fa6e07343ea70ea3a57ddcdcc0f62e63 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 23 |
PMID | 24178593 |
PQID | 1448211745 |
PQPubID | 23479 |
PageCount | 16 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_1448211745 pubmed_primary_24178593 crossref_primary_10_1007_BF00805860 crossref_citationtrail_10_1007_BF00805860 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 1900 |
PublicationDate | 1996-Dec |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 1996-12-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 12 year: 1996 text: 1996-Dec |
PublicationDecade | 1990 |
PublicationPlace | Austria |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: Austria |
PublicationTitle | Amino acids |
PublicationTitleAlternate | Amino Acids |
PublicationYear | 1996 |
References | H Godel (CR6) 1984; 297 Y Shimomura (CR19) 1990; 68 RA Harris (CR11) 1995; 125 AJM Wagenmakers (CR23) 1989; 59 DM Bier (CR1) 1989; 5 AX Bigard (CR2) 1993; 66 PL Crowell (CR4) 1990; 52 W Hageloch (CR8) 1990; 11 GJ Kasperek (CR13) 1985; 248 DA Mac Lean (CR15) 1993; 74 AE Harper (CR10) 1984; 4 TE Graham (CR7) 1992; 70 RP Brokman (CR3) 1987; 65 RL Jungans (CR12) 1992; 72 EF Palo De (CR5) 1993; 4 DA Mac Lean (CR17) 1992; 70 S Hara (CR9) 1985; 334 Da Mac Lean (CR16) 1991; 70 DA Sewell (CR18) 1992; 65 AJM Wagenmakers (CR24) 1990; 11 LS Lamont (CR14) 1990; 69 AJM Wagenmakers (CR22) 1991; 260 MA Tarnopolski (CR21) 1992; 73 B Skeie (CR20) 1990; 18 1581847 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1992 Jan;70(1):132-41 3322539 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1987 Oct;65(10):2065-70 2312455 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1990 Jan;68(1):161-5 7782941 - J Nutr. 1995 Jun;125(6 Suppl):1758S-1761S 8425512 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1993;66(1):5-10 1864791 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1991 May;70(5):2095-103 2193889 - Int J Sports Med. 1990 May;11 Suppl 2:S101-13 24190607 - Amino Acids. 1993 Oct;4(3):255-66 1474076 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1992 Nov;73(5):1986-95 2361780 - Int J Sports Med. 1990 May;11 Suppl 2:S56-61 1557428 - Physiol Rev. 1992 Apr;72(2):419-48 4086555 - J Chromatogr. 1985 Nov 8;344:33-9 2375298 - Am J Clin Nutr. 1990 Aug;52(2):313-9 2583157 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1989;59(3):159-67 1396658 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1992;65(3):271-7 1498711 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1992 Apr;70(4):420-7 2647431 - Diabetes Metab Rev. 1989 Mar;5(2):111-32 3970232 - Am J Physiol. 1985 Feb;248(2 Pt 2):R166-71 2203721 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1990 Jul;69(1):1-6 6490773 - J Chromatogr. 1984 Aug 3;297:49-61 2058665 - Am J Physiol. 1991 Jun;260(6 Pt 1):E883-90 2158415 - Crit Care Med. 1990 May;18(5):549-71 8365971 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1993 Jun;74(6):2711-7 6380539 - Annu Rev Nutr. 1984;4:409-54 |
References_xml | – volume: 65 start-page: 271 year: 1992 ident: CR18 publication-title: Eur J Physiol doi: 10.1007/BF00705093 – volume: 69 start-page: 1 year: 1990 ident: CR14 publication-title: J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1152/jappl.1990.69.1.1 – volume: 70 start-page: 2095 year: 1991 ident: CR16 publication-title: J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1152/jappl.1991.70.5.2095 – volume: 11 start-page: S56 issue: [Suppl] 2 year: 1990 ident: CR8 publication-title: Int J Sports Med doi: 10.1055/s-2007-1024855 – volume: 73 start-page: 1986 year: 1992 ident: CR21 publication-title: J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1152/jappl.1992.73.5.1986 – volume: 74 start-page: 2711 year: 1993 ident: CR15 publication-title: J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1152/jappl.1993.74.6.2711 – volume: 70 start-page: 420 year: 1992 ident: CR17 publication-title: Can J Physiol Pharmacol doi: 10.1139/y92-053 – volume: 68 start-page: 161 year: 1990 ident: CR19 publication-title: J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1152/jappl.1990.68.1.161 – volume: 5 start-page: 111 year: 1989 ident: CR1 publication-title: Diabetes Metab Rev doi: 10.1002/dmr.5610050203 – volume: 18 start-page: 549 year: 1990 ident: CR20 publication-title: Crit Care Med doi: 10.1097/00003246-199005000-00019 – volume: 334 start-page: 33 year: 1985 ident: CR9 publication-title: J Chromatogr doi: 10.1016/S0378-4347(00)82004-6 – volume: 72 start-page: 419 year: 1992 ident: CR12 publication-title: Physiol Rev doi: 10.1152/physrev.1992.72.2.419 – volume: 65 start-page: 2065 year: 1987 ident: CR3 publication-title: Can J Physiol Pharmacol doi: 10.1139/y87-323 – volume: 66 start-page: 5 year: 1993 ident: CR2 publication-title: Eur J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1007/BF00863392 – volume: 52 start-page: 313 year: 1990 ident: CR4 publication-title: Am J Clin Nutr doi: 10.1093/ajcn/52.2.313 – volume: 248 start-page: R166 year: 1985 ident: CR13 publication-title: Am J Physiol – volume: 125 start-page: 1758S year: 1995 ident: CR11 publication-title: J Nutr – volume: 70 start-page: 132 year: 1992 ident: CR7 publication-title: Can J Physiol Pharmacol doi: 10.1139/y92-020 – volume: 297 start-page: 49 year: 1984 ident: CR6 publication-title: J Chromatogr doi: 10.1016/S0021-9673(01)89028-2 – volume: 4 start-page: 255 year: 1993 ident: CR5 publication-title: Amino Acids doi: 10.1007/BF00805827 – volume: 59 start-page: 159 year: 1989 ident: CR23 publication-title: Eur J Appl Physiol doi: 10.1007/BF02386181 – volume: 260 start-page: E883 year: 1991 ident: CR22 publication-title: Am J Physiol – volume: 4 start-page: 409 year: 1984 ident: CR10 publication-title: Ann Rev Nutr doi: 10.1146/annurev.nu.04.070184.002205 – volume: 11 start-page: S101 issue: [Suppl] 2 year: 1990 ident: CR24 publication-title: Int J Sports Med doi: 10.1055/s-2007-1024861 – reference: 1864791 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1991 May;70(5):2095-103 – reference: 2058665 - Am J Physiol. 1991 Jun;260(6 Pt 1):E883-90 – reference: 2312455 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1990 Jan;68(1):161-5 – reference: 2647431 - Diabetes Metab Rev. 1989 Mar;5(2):111-32 – reference: 2375298 - Am J Clin Nutr. 1990 Aug;52(2):313-9 – reference: 1474076 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1992 Nov;73(5):1986-95 – reference: 2203721 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1990 Jul;69(1):1-6 – reference: 24190607 - Amino Acids. 1993 Oct;4(3):255-66 – reference: 1396658 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1992;65(3):271-7 – reference: 3322539 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1987 Oct;65(10):2065-70 – reference: 3970232 - Am J Physiol. 1985 Feb;248(2 Pt 2):R166-71 – reference: 2158415 - Crit Care Med. 1990 May;18(5):549-71 – reference: 2583157 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1989;59(3):159-67 – reference: 8365971 - J Appl Physiol (1985). 1993 Jun;74(6):2711-7 – reference: 6380539 - Annu Rev Nutr. 1984;4:409-54 – reference: 2361780 - Int J Sports Med. 1990 May;11 Suppl 2:S56-61 – reference: 1581847 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1992 Jan;70(1):132-41 – reference: 6490773 - J Chromatogr. 1984 Aug 3;297:49-61 – reference: 7782941 - J Nutr. 1995 Jun;125(6 Suppl):1758S-1761S – reference: 2193889 - Int J Sports Med. 1990 May;11 Suppl 2:S101-13 – reference: 4086555 - J Chromatogr. 1985 Nov 8;344:33-9 – reference: 1498711 - Can J Physiol Pharmacol. 1992 Apr;70(4):420-7 – reference: 1557428 - Physiol Rev. 1992 Apr;72(2):419-48 – reference: 8425512 - Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1993;66(1):5-10 |
SSID | ssj0012816 |
Score | 1.4996041 |
Snippet | To examine the effects of acute branched-chainα-amino acids (BCAA) oral administration following chronic BCAA intake, a group of well trained young swimmers (n... |
SourceID | proquest pubmed crossref |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Enrichment Source |
StartPage | 317 |
Title | Branched-chainα-amino acid chronic treatment: responses of plasmaα-keto-related compounds and ammonia when used in physical exercise performance |
URI | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24178593 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1448211745 |
Volume | 10 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3LjtMwFLVgZgEbxJvykhGwQFVQYufhYddWLSM0dDat1F3l-DGNYJJqJhUSn8Gf8CN8E9exnaRikAY2URXZVpp7bN8bn3suQm_AZeCUa5hpjNMAZiIJeEhVoLMj2CzyMJGNgOnneXq8jD-tklVHyGyyS-r8vfh-ZV7J_1gV7oFdTZbsP1i2HRRuwG-wL1zBwnC9lo3HpirGRslAbEyAP5m-HUcBPy_KashFIYfCKt92bHIT_19YVqwVm92C83zOXc8vqq6CJrlFNbluW1NyyWo4c_OnCj78tlHlcHepZMM-9zb2dZuMCLJPQ-h7vaP2kboy9gqcV3vsM-3YxR95bekFHY2xOKt62RFmETfEZNvqtPtm0dCcO_6H-_hozp9jJzXr1-Gwh7e4t6hSm935x2Ifego7eL0Js2UJ9hW156fr2fLkZL2YrhY30SHJMnOUfziajcfz9qyJsKZAbvtM-yK2bux9t-UvsUjjkyzuojsumMAji4x76IYq76NbE1_D7wH6sY-QXz8tOrAxBXbowC06PuAWG7jS2GID-vRxgVtcYMAFdrjABhfY4AIXJfa4wB4XuIeLh2g5my4mx4GrwhEIwpI60CzkEWzPNEpzrUmqCGEiSs1pgiFI56HmqYKNIqaKZ6GCmZ9kUgopRKhTolL6CB2UVameIExjziKqjnKlZZxDrM1ZrHikmaSSJDweoHf-Ja-Fk6g3lVK-rr24dmeQAXrdtt1aYZYrW73ytlrDqzeHYbxU1e4SQt6YkQji8WSAHlsjtuOAV5sZHcCn1-j9DN3uEP4cHdQXO_UC_NQ6f-mA9htXi5hZ |
linkProvider | Library Specific Holdings |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=Branched-chain%CE%B1-amino+acid+chronic+treatment%3A+responses+of+plasma%CE%B1-keto-related+compounds+and+ammonia+when+used+in+physical+exercise+performance&rft.jtitle=Amino+acids&rft.au=De+Palo%2C+E+F&rft.au=Gatti%2C+R&rft.au=Bigon%2C+L&rft.au=Previti%2C+O&rft.date=1996-12-01&rft.issn=0939-4451&rft.volume=10&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=317&rft_id=info:doi/10.1007%2FBF00805860&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0939-4451&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0939-4451&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0939-4451&client=summon |