Acute, dose-response effects of guayusa leaf extract on mood, cognitive and motor-cognitive performance, and blood pressure, heart rate, and ventricular repolarization

We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial in young adults to examine the dose-dependent (600 mg versus 1200 mg), acute effects of consumption of an tea extract (GLE) on mood, cognitive and motor-cognitive performance, as well as its acute cardiovascular effects. Twe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition 2024-12, Vol.21 (1), p.2379424
Hauptverfasser: Helwig, Nathaniel J, Schwager, Laura E, Berry, Alexander C, Zucker, Anna C, Venenga, Jacob S, Sterbenz, Samantha C, Jenkins, Nathaniel D M
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We conducted a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial in young adults to examine the dose-dependent (600 mg versus 1200 mg), acute effects of consumption of an tea extract (GLE) on mood, cognitive and motor-cognitive performance, as well as its acute cardiovascular effects. Twenty-five adults (mean ± SD, age = 28 ± 7 y; 9 M/16 F) completed familiarization and then three randomly ordered experimental visits where they consumed either 600 mg (GLE ) or 1200 mg (GLE ) GLE or placebo (PLA). Following supplement consumption, participants completed a mood state survey, assessments of perceived jitteriness, energy, and focus, and neurocognitive and motor-cognitive testing. Blood pressure (BP), heart rate, and QT interval length were determined before and after supplementation. GLE significantly improved total mood disturbance (mean ± SE difference = -6.9 ± 2.6 au,  = 0.034), fatigue-inertia (-2.84 ± 0.89 au,  = 0.008), perceived energy (+13.00 ± 4.49 au;  = 0.02), motor speed (+4.52 ± 1.42 au,  = 0.008), and psychomotor speed (+7.20 ± 2.16 au,  = 0.005) relative to PLA. GLE also improved psychomotor speed (+5.08 ± 2.16 ms,  = 0.045) and uniquely increased motor-cognitive performance as reflected by a decrease in reaction time (-0.106 ± 0.04 ms,  = 0.026) during a neurocognitive hop test. The effect of GLE on jitteriness was both dose- and sex-dependent. Jitteriness increased with increasing GLE dose in women only (  
ISSN:1550-2783
1550-2783
DOI:10.1080/15502783.2024.2379424