Abstract

The use of nicotine amongst professional and elite athletes is high, with anecdotal evidence indicating increased prevalence amongst cycling sports. However, previous investigations into its effects on performance have not used high-validity or -reliability protocols nor trained cyclists. Therefore, the present study determined whether nicotine administration proved ergogenic during a ∼1 h self-paced cycling time-trial (TT). Ten well-trained male cyclists (34 ± 9 years; 71 ± 8 kg; O2max: 71 ± 6 ml ⋅ kg−1 ⋅ min−1) completed three work-dependent TT following ∼30 min administration of 2 mg nicotine gum (GUM), ∼10 h administration of 7 mg ⋅ 24 h−1 nicotine patch (PAT) or color- and flavor-matched placebos (PLA) in a randomized, crossover, and double blind design. Measures of nicotine’s primary metabolite (cotinine), core body temperature, heart rate, blood biochemistry (pH, HCO3−, La−) and Borg’s rating of perceived exertion (RPE) accompanied performance measures of time and power output. Plasma concentrations of cotinine were highest for PAT, followed by GUM, then PLA, respectively (p < 0.01). GUM and PAT resulted in no significant improvement in performance time compared to PLA (62.9 ± 4.1 min, 62.6 ± 4.5 min, and 63.3 ± 4.1 min, respectively; p = 0.73), with mean power outputs of 264 ± 31, 265 ± 32, and 263 ± 33 W, respectively (p = 0.74). Core body temperature was similar between trials (p = 0.33) whilst HR averaged 170 ± 10, 170 ± 11, and 171 ± 11 beats ⋅ min−1 (p = 0.60) for GUM, PAT, and PLA, respectively. There were no differences between trials for any blood biochemistry (all p > 0.46) or RPE with mean values of 16.7 ± 0.9, 16.8 ± 0.7, and 16.8 ± 0.8 (p = 0.89) for GUM, PAT, and PLA, respectively. In conclusion: (i) nicotine administration, whether via gum or transdermal patch, did not exert an ergogenic or ergolytic effect on self-paced cycling performance of ∼1 h; (ii) systemic delivery of nicotine was greatest when using a transdermal patch; and (iii) nicotine administration did not alter any of the psycho-physiological measures observed.

Highlights

  • The use of nicotine or nicotine-containing substances is not banned by the World AntiDoping Agency (WADA)

  • Main effects of treatment (p < 0.01, ηp2 = 0.85) and time (p = 0.03, ηp2 = 0.31) but no interaction (p = 0.27, ηp2 = 0.14) were observed, such that the magnitude in concentrations were attained in the following order: PAT > GUM > PLA, and concentrations increased above baseline for GUM whilst concentrations remained constant for PAT and PLA

  • Participants reported no adverse effects with overnight exposure to nicotine via the transdermal patch or through chewing gum

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Summary

Introduction

The use of nicotine or nicotine-containing substances is not banned by the World AntiDoping Agency (WADA). Use of nicotine or nicotine-containing substances amongst elite and professional athletes is high and increasing. Cross-sectional, self-report data indicate a 25–35% prevalence of smokeless tobacco use, whilst data from anti-doping urine analyses display a detection of nicotine or its metabolites in 23–36% of samples (see Mündel, 2017 for review). WADA placed nicotine on its Monitoring Program (World Anti-Doping Agency [WADA], 2012) to further detect patterns of use to determine whether it should be upgraded to the List of Prohibited Substances. Anecdotal reports indicate an increased prevalence of nicotine use in cycling sports. Eight studies have assessed performance using cycling protocols in response to consumption of nicotine or smokeless tobacco. The protocols used have minimal validity (time-to-exhaustion, 30 s Wingate, and incremental maximal tests) and together with the untrained, non-cyclist cohorts used reduce the reliability of these performance tests, thereby limiting the smallest worthwhile effect that can be detected (i.e., sensitivity; see Currell and Jeukendrup, 2008 for review)

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