Acetazolamide does not alter endurance exercise performance at 3,500-m altitude
Author(s) -
Karleigh E. Bradbury,
Beau R. Yurkevicius,
Katherine Mitchell,
Kirsten E. Coffman,
Roy M. Salgado,
Charles S. Fulco,
Robert W. Kenefick,
Nisha Charkoudian
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of applied physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.253
H-Index - 229
eISSN - 8750-7587
pISSN - 1522-1601
DOI - 10.1152/japplphysiol.00655.2019
Subject(s) - acetazolamide , placebo , time trial , effects of high altitude on humans , medicine , crossover study , treadmill , vo2 max , endurance training , hypoxia (environmental) , altitude (triangle) , anesthesia , zoology , physical therapy , oxygen , heart rate , chemistry , blood pressure , mathematics , anatomy , biology , geometry , alternative medicine , organic chemistry , pathology
Acetazolamide (AZ) is a medication commonly used to prevent acute mountain sickness (AMS) during rapid ascent to high altitude. However, it is unclear whether AZ use impairs exercise performance; previous literature regarding this topic is equivocal. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the impact of AZ on time-trial (TT) performance during a 30-h exposure to hypobaric hypoxia equivalent to 3,500-m altitude. Ten men [sea-level peak oxygen consumption (VO 2 peak): 50.8 ± 6.5 mL·kg −1 ·min −1 ; body fat %: 20.6 ± 5.2%] completed 2 30-h exposures at 3,500 m. In a crossover study design, subjects were given 500 mg/day of either AZ or a placebo. Exercise testing was completed 2 h and 24 h after ascent and consisted of 15-min steady-state treadmill walking at 40%–45% sea-level VO 2 peak, followed by a 2-mile self-paced treadmill TT. AMS was assessed after ~12 h and 22 h at 3,500 m. The incidence of AMS decreased from 40% with placebo to 0% with AZ. Oxygen saturation was higher ( P 0.05) or 24 h (21.5 ± 3.4 vs. 21.1 ± 2.9 min, P > 0.05) of exposure to altitude. Our results suggest that AZ (500 mg/day) does not negatively impact endurance exercise performance at 3,500 m. NEW & NOTEWORTHY To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine the impact of acetazolamide (500 mg/day) versus placebo on self-paced, peak-effort exercise performance using a short-duration exercise test in a hypobaric hypoxic environment with a repeated-measures design. In the present study, acetazolamide did not impact exercise performance after 2-h or 24-h exposure to 3,500-m simulated altitude.
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