Supplement produces a 'striking' endurance boost

August 26, 2010

Research from the University of Exeter has revealed taking a dietary supplement to boost nitric oxide in the body can significantly boost stamina during high-intensity exercise.

The study has important implications for athletes, as results suggest that taking the supplement can allow people to exercise up to 20% longer and could produce a 1-2% improvement in race times.

This comes on the back of previous research from Exeter which showed that the high nitrate content of beetroot juice, which also boosts nitric oxide in the body, has a similar effect on performance.

However, the latest study gets the nitric oxide into the body through a different - and now the researchers are hoping to find out whether combining the two methods could bring an even greater improvement in .

Professor Andrew Jones, from the University's School of Sport and Health Sciences, said: "The research found that when the was used there was a striking increase in performance by altering the use of oxygen during exercise.

"This is important for endurance athletes as we would expect the supplement to bring a 1-2% improvement in race times. While this may seem small, this is a very meaningful improvement - particularly at elite levels where small gains can be the difference between winning and losing."

For the research, nine healthy males were put through several different physical challenges on a cycling ergometer to measure their performance under different levels of exercise intensity.

Participants were randomly assigned to take either a blackcurrant cordial placebo drink or the genuine supplement, which was Ark 1 from Arkworld International Limited - which contains the L-arginine amino acid which enhances the production of nitric oxide in the body.

The report, published on-line by the , found taking the supplement:

  • Improves severe-intensity exercise endurance by 20%
  • Significantly reduces systolic blood pressure
  • Reduces the oxygen cost of exercise

More information: The dietary supplement used in the study is known as Ark 1 and is distributed by 'Arkworld International Limited'. You can access the link to the product at: http://www.arkworl … .php?go=ark1

Provided by University of Exeter (news : web)

1.9 /5 (22 votes)  

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tkjtkj
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (6)
This kind of blatant commercialism is the beginning of the end for Physorg.com ..
the article is nothing other than an advertisement!!!!
RayG
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (7)
Yeah, please apologise to your readers for this crap. L-arginine is a well-established and cheap sports supplement with dozens of published studies in peer-reviewed research. This is just a plug for someone trying to sell their beetroot juice at a higher price. Going to stop reading if I continue seeing crap like this, I can't believe you actually linked to their website to boot. You aren't doing science reporting, clean it up or GTFO.
swight
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (6)
I'm disappointed in you physorg, you seemed to be above this type of crap...
JimB135
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (5)
I completely agree.
L-arginine is already in every Nitric oxide enhancing supplement on the market and there are hundreds of them so there is nothing new or special about Ark 1 except that they figured out a way to get noticed on this site. There are truckloads of pseudoscience associated with the sports nutrition industry and they use it to their best advantage to market their products. Their adds are filled with pseudoscience hokus pocus nonsense.
I use some of these products prior to training. Do they make a difference? Probably.... but mostly through the placebo effect!
SincerelyTwo
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (4)
Physorg started down the slippery slope a couple years ago, it's only getting worse, they have no mental concept of 'thresholds' in their business model, they'll just slide on all the way in to crap and stay stuck there for all time.

Once I come across a better site I can abandon this mess, physorg your days are numbered. Once a strong competitor arrives you will fall ... it's a matter of time. Unless you can find a way to change, which I have every bit of confidence you won't, because I'm just a stupid internet avator, right?
otto1923
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
Heres the abstract:
http://jap.physio...3.2010v1
-Which makes no mention of the specific product.
bottomlesssoul
Aug 26, 2010

Rank: 2.3 / 5 (3)
Contrary to the negative sentiment in the posts I celebrate this report. It further supports the evidence that small doses of arginine do aid aerobic exercise.

And I like it also provides an excellent dietary source, though I personally get it cheaper in pill form.
CarolinaScotsman
Aug 27, 2010

Rank: 4.2 / 5 (5)
By mentioning a product name, not once but several times, Physorg has totally trashed any objectivity they may have had. Were you paid for this advertisement? I expected much better from this website and am totally disappointed. Shame on you for such blatant commercialism.
CarolinaScotsman
Aug 27, 2010

Rank: 5 / 5 (3)
Please take note of the following reported on the wikipedia website.

A clinical trial (University of Georgia Medical School) found that patients taking an L-arginine supplement following a heart attack didn't improve in their vascular tone or their hearts' ability to pump. In fact, six more patients who were taking L-arginine died than those taking a placebo and the study was stopped early with the recommendation the supplement not be used by heart attack patients.

The Mayo Clinic web page on L-arginine reports that inhalation of L-arginine can increase lung inflammation and worsen asthma.

In short, series medical problems mya arise from using this supplement. Physorg should have noted this.
freethinking
Aug 27, 2010

Rank: not rated yet
Physorg is know to report on stupid studies, especially that support progressive causes. Even for physorg, this is a new low. How much did physorg get paid for running this ad?
Mauricio
Aug 28, 2010

Rank: 1 / 5 (2)
I agree with bottomlesssoul, I like the paper, the information was not completely known, and yes, I take several supplements that raise my l-arginine. I don't agree that the paper is advertising.

People complain and disagree a lot pretending appear intelligent (e.g., glenn beck), I saw a lot of that in the ladies during the phd program I went to....
Rank 1.9 /5 (22 votes)
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