Abstract
The present study aimed to investigate whether acute L-citrulline supplementation would affect inspiratory muscle oxygenation and respiratory performance. Twelve healthy males received 6 g of L-citrulline or placebo in a double-blind crossover design. Pulmonary function (i.e., forced expired volume in 1 s, forced vital capacity and their ratio), maximal inspiratory pressure (MIP), fractional exhaled nitric oxide (NO•), and sternocleidomastoid muscle oxygenation were measured at baseline, one hour post supplementation, and after an incremental resistive breathing protocol to task failure of the respiratory muscles. The resistive breathing task consisted of 30 inspirations at 70% and 80% of MIP followed by continuous inspirations at 90% of MIP until task failure. Sternocleidomastoid muscle oxygenation was assessed using near-infrared spectroscopy. One-hour post-L-citrulline supplementation, exhaled NO• was significantly increased (19.2%; p < 0.05), and this increase was preserved until the end of the resistive breathing (16.4%; p < 0.05). In contrast, no difference was observed in the placebo condition. Pulmonary function and MIP were not affected by the L-citrulline supplementation. During resistive breathing, sternocleidomastoid muscle oxygenation was significantly reduced, with no difference noted between the two supplementation conditions. In conclusion, a single ingestion of 6 g L-citrulline increased NO• bioavailability but not the respiratory performance and inspiratory muscle oxygenation.
Highlights
L-citrulline is a nonessential, non-coded alpha-amino acid that has a key role during the urea cycle in the liver [1]
We found that a single dose of 6 g of L-citrulline increased exhaled NO one hour after the supplementation, which is supported by relevant studies that showed that after oral Lcitrulline supplementation, L-arginine concentrations peak around one hour later [45,46] in a dose-dependent manner [5]
We found that a single ingestion of 6 g of L-citrulline 1 hour before resistive breathing significantly increased NO bioavailability
Summary
L-citrulline is a nonessential, non-coded alpha-amino acid that has a key role during the urea cycle in the liver [1]. This formation of NO from arginine is catalyzed by nitric oxide synthase with citrulline release [1]
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