Fragmented Dosing of β-alanine Induces A Body Weight-Independent Pharmacokinetic Response

Nutrients. 2019 Nov 23;11(12):2869. doi: 10.3390/nu11122869.

Abstract

Personalised dosing of performance-enhancing food supplements is a hot topic. β-alanine is currently dosed using a fixed dose; however, evidence suggests that this might favour light compared to heavy subjects. A weight-relative dose seems to reverse this problem. In the present study, a novel dosing strategy was tested. A fragmented dose, composed of a fixed fragment of 800 mg and a weight-relative fragment of 10 mg/kg body weight, was compared to a fixed dose of 1600 mg and a weight-relative dose of 20 mg/kg body weight in a cohort of 20 subjects with a body weight ranging 48-139 kg (79.9 ± 24.4 kg). The results show that, following a fragmented dose, the influence of body weight on the pharmacokinetic response (iAUC) over a 210 min period was absent (r = -0.168; p = 0.478), in contrast to the fixed or weight-relative dose. The pharmacokinetic response also seemed more homogenous (CV% = 26%) following a fragmented dose compared to the fixed (33%) and the weight-relative dose (31%). The primary advantage of the easy-to-calculate fragmented dosing strategy is that it does not systematically favour or impair a certain weight group. Thorough dosage studies are lacking in the current field of sports and food supplements, therefore similar considerations can be made towards other (ergogenic) food supplements.

Keywords: beta-alanine; carnosine; ergogenic; food supplement; personalised nutrition.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Body Weight*
  • Carnosine / analysis
  • Dietary Supplements
  • Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Performance-Enhancing Substances / pharmacokinetics*
  • Young Adult
  • beta-Alanine / administration & dosage*
  • beta-Alanine / pharmacokinetics*

Substances

  • Performance-Enhancing Substances
  • beta-Alanine
  • Carnosine