咖啡因
篮球
安慰剂
精英
交叉研究
物理疗法
医学
任务(项目管理)
心理学
内科学
工程类
病理
考古
法学
系统工程
替代医学
历史
政治
政治学
作者
Aaron T. Scanlan,Vincent J. Dalbo,Daniele Conte,Emilija Stojanović,Nenad Stojiljković,Ratko Stanković,Vladimir Antić,Zoran Milanović
标识
DOI:10.1123/ijspp.2018-0871
摘要
Purpose : To examine the effect of caffeine supplementation on dribbling speed in elite female and male basketball players. Methods : A double-blind, counterbalanced, randomized, crossover design was used. Elite basketball players (N = 21; 10 female, 11 male; age 18.3 [3.3] y) completed placebo (3 mg·kg −1 of body mass of dextrose) and caffeine (3 mg·kg −1 of body mass) trials 1 wk apart during the in-season phase. During each trial, players completed 20-m linear sprints with and without dribbling a basketball. Performance times were recorded at 5-, 10-, and 20-m splits. Dribbling speed was measured using traditional (total performance time) and novel (dribble deficit) methods. Dribble deficit isolates the added time taken to complete a task when dribbling compared with a nondribbling version of the same task. Comparisons between placebo and caffeine conditions were conducted at group and individual levels. Results : Nonsignificant ( P > .05), trivial to small (effect size = 0.04–0.42) differences in dribbling speed were observed between conditions. The majority (20 out of 21) of players were classified as nonresponders to caffeine, with 1 player identified as a negative responder using dribble-deficit measures. Conclusions : Results indicate that caffeine offers no ergogenic benefit to dribbling speed in elite basketball players. The negative response to caffeine in 1 player indicates that caffeine supplementation may be detrimental to dribbling speed in specific cases and emphasizes the need for individualized analyses in nutrition-based sport-science research.
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