David C. Sanders’s research while affiliated with Brigham Young University–Hawaii and other places

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Publications (3)


A Pre-Exercise Dose of Muscle Sentry® has no Effect on Performing Repeated Leg Press Sets to Failure
  • Article

January 2017

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1 Citation

Trezlyn M. Bartschi

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David C. Sanders

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[...]

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A Pre-exercise Dose Of Muscle Sentry® Has No Effect On Performing Repeated Leg Press Sets To Failure.: 1289 Board #82 May 28, 9

May 2015

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16 Reads

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3 Citations

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

This study compared the number of bilateral leg presses done at 150% of body mass while on either Muscle Sentry® (MS) or placebo (PL). Participants (16 women, 14 men, college students 19–26 years) performed 2 sets of leg press to failure using 150% of their body mass with 5 min rest separating the 2 sets. Each exercise was performed twice (1× MS, 1× PL) at the same time of day with 48 h separating each exercise. Both MS and PL were ingested 30 min prior to performing the exercise. Just prior to starting the exercise and at the end of each set, heart rate, and blood pressure were obtained and the rate pressure product was calculated to determine myocardial workload. Two-way repeated measures ANOVA for lift number showed no significant main effects for either MS vs. PL, or for Set1 vs. Set2 (p > 0.05). The interaction was also not statistically different (mean repetitions ± std. dev.: MS1= 28±20, MS2= 26±18, PL1 = 30±24, PL2 = 29±20). Two-way repeated measures ANOVA for rate pressure product showed no significance for either the main effect for MS vs. PL, or supplement × pre-post interaction (p > 0.05). The main effect for pre-lift vs. post lift was significant (p<0.001) with post being higher than pre. Ingestion of Muscle Sentry® 30 min prior to leg pressing 150% of body mass to failure had no effect upon either total work performance or myocardial workload.

Citations (2)


... Additionally, a reduction in blood glucose clearance was seen following ingestion of melatonin (31). Changes in human exercise substrate utilization with exogenous melatonin, however, are poorly understood with only Sanders et al. (36) reporting that blood glucose levels during graded exercise were higher following the ingestion of melatonin. ...

Reference:

A Pre-Exercise Dose of Melatonin Can Alter Substrate Use During Exercise
A Pre-exercise Dose Of Melatonin Can Alter Blood Glucose Levels During Exercise.: 1687 Board #32 May 28, 2
  • Citing Article
  • May 2015

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise

... Time to exhaustion during high-intensity cycle ergometer exercise was appreciably extended (17%) by high doses of oral lactate [5]. More recently, other commercially available supplements containing lactate have been shown to have unappreciable effects on skeletal muscle endurance during resistance exercise [37,38] but interpretation pertaining to lactate supplementation per se was complicated by the addition of other potentially active ingredients. ...

A Pre-exercise Dose Of Muscle Sentry® Has No Effect On Performing Repeated Leg Press Sets To Failure.: 1289 Board #82 May 28, 9
  • Citing Article
  • May 2015

Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise