Research: BLACK and OCONNOR,

Listed in Issue 166

Abstract

BLACK and OCONNOR,  Dept. of Kinesiology, Georgia College and State University, Milledgeville, GA, USA studied the effects of an oral dose of ginger upon quadricipes muscle pain, and parameters of exercise exertion.

Background

Ginger has known hypoalgesic and anti-inflammatory properties.

Methodology

The effects of an oral dose of ginger on quadriceps muscle pain, rating of perceived exertion (RPE), and recovery of oxygen consumption were examined during and after moderate-intensity cycling exercise. Twenty-five college-age participants ingested a 2-g dose of ginger or placebo in a double-blind, crossover design and 30 min later completed 30 min of cycling at 60% of VO2peak. Quadriceps muscle pain, RPE, work rate, heart rate (HR), and oxygen uptake (VO2) were recorded every 5 min during exercise, and HR and VO2 were recorded for 20 min after exercise.

Results

Compared with placebo, ginger had no clinically meaningful or statistically significant effect on perceptions of muscle pain, RPE, work rate, HR, or VO2 during exercise. Recovery of VO2 and HR after the 30-min exercise bout followed a similar time course in the ginger and placebo conditions.

Conclusion

The results were consistent with related findings showing that ingesting a large dose of aspirin does not acutely alter quadriceps muscle pain during cycling, and this suggests that prostaglandins do not play a large role in this type of exercise-induced skeletal-muscle pain. Ginger consumption has also been shown to improve VO2 recovery in an equine exercise model, but these results show that this is not the case in humans.

References

Black CD and  Oconnor PJ. Acute effects of dietary ginger on quadriceps muscle pain during moderate-intensity cycling exercise. International Journal of Sport Nutrition & Exercise Metabolism. 18(6): 653-64 Dec 2008.

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