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Maple Syrup Carbohydrate Dose-Response on 20-km Cycling Time-Trial Performance

Sponsored by Université de Montréal

About this trial

Last updated 4 months ago

Study ID

ICM 2026-3568

Status

Not yet recruiting

Type

Interventional

Phase

N/A

Placebo

No

Accepting

18 to 45 Years
Male

Trial Timing

Started 4 months ago

What is this trial about?

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn whether maple syrup can be used as a natural carbohydrate source to help trained male cyclists perform better during long-duration cycling. The study also aims to learn how different amounts of maple syrup affect energy use in the body, stomach comfort, and feelings of effort and fatigue. The main questions the study aims to answer are: * Does consuming more carbohydrate from maple syrup help participants finish a 20-kilometer cycling time trial faster? * How do different amounts of maple syrup change how the body uses carbohydrates and fats during long exercise? * Are higher amounts of maple syrup easy for participants to tolerate without stomach problems? Researchers will compare four drinks: 1. A placebo drink (a look-alike drink with no calories), 2. A drink that provides 60 grams of carbohydrate per hour, 3. A drink that provides 90 grams per hour, and 4. A drink that provides 120 grams per hour. They will compare these drinks to see whether higher carbohydrate amounts lead to better cycling performance and how each dose affects comfort and metabolism. Participants will: * Attend a screening visit that includes a health check and a glucose tolerance test. * Complete a fitness test to measure their aerobic capacity and practice the cycling tests used in the study. * Take part in four separate exercise sessions in random order. Each session includes: * Drinking one of the four study beverages during 2 hours of steady cycling, * Completing two short, all-out 6-second sprints during the ride, * Completing a 20-kilometer cycling time trial as fast as possible, * Reporting stomach symptoms and perceptions of effort, * Providing breath, blood, urine, and sweat samples so researchers can measure how their body uses fuel. All drinks will look, taste, and smell similar so participants cannot tell which one they are receiving. Meals before each session will be provided to keep conditions the same across visits. This study may help athletes and active people choose natural carbohydrate sources that support both performance and comfort during long endurance exercise. The findings may also guide future research on the use of maple syrup as a sports nutrition option.

What are the participation requirements?

Inclusion Criteria

* Age: 18-45 years.

* Relative VO2max: >55 mL·min-¹·kg-¹ for level 3; >65 mL·min-¹·kg-¹ for level 4.

* Peak Power Output (PPO): >4.6 W·kg-¹ (absolute PPO >320 W).

* Training History: >5 hours/week of cycling-specific training; >1 year of consistent endurance training.

* No history of metabolic disorders, gastrointestinal issues, or contraindications to exercise testing.

Exclusion Criteria

* Current or past metabolic disorders (diabetes, metabolic syndrome)

* Cardiovascular disease or abnormal ECG at rest

* Gastrointestinal disorders (IBS, Crohn's, celiac disease)

* Food allergies or intolerances (particularly maple, fructose)

* Current use of medications affecting metabolism

* Smoking or nicotine use

* Alcohol consumption >14 units/week

* Recent illness or injury (<4 weeks)

* Participation in other clinical trials (<3 months)

* Unable to maintain consistent training during study period