In order to study the influence of the power output on the oxidation rate of exogenous
glucose and on the contribution of the various substrates to the energy demand, we
combined the use of artificially enriched 13 C-glucose with classical indirect calorimetry during uphill treadmill exercise. Six
young male healthy subjects underwent three exercise bouts, in a randomized order
and at least two weeks apart, at a low (45 % VO2 max, 1822 ± 194 ml O2 /min for 4 hours), moderate (60 % VO2 max, 2582 ± 226 ml O2 /min for 3 hours), and high intensity (75 % VO2 max, 3036 ± 287 ml O2 /min for 2 hours). After 10 min of exercise, each subject ingested 100 g of artificially
13 C-labelled glucose dissolved in 400 ml of water. Over the four hours of the exercise
at 45 % VO2 max, the amount of exogenous glucose oxidized was 89.5 ± 5.9 g from the 100 g ingested.
In all exercise bouts, the oxidation of exogenous glucose already began during the
first 30 min after ingestion and peaked at 120 min. The maximum oxidation rates averaged
0.64 ± 0.07, 0.75 ± 0.04, and 0.63 ± 0.08 g/min, and the mean amounts of exogenous
glucose oxidized over the first two hours averaged 51.7 ± 8.0, 61.5 ± 6.6 and 50.9
± 8.45 g, at 45, 60 and 75 % VO2 max respectively. The contribution of the oxidation of exogenous glucose to the total
energy supply progressively decreased when the power output increased, from 19.6 to
12.2 %. In the meantime, the contribution of total carbohydrates (exogenous + endogenous)
progressively increased from 55.1 to 77.8 % while the contribution of lipids decreased
from 35.5 to 16.6 %. In conclusion, exogenous glucose ingested during exercise is
largely oxidized and strongly contributes to the energy supply. The oxidation rate
first increases with the power output, but levels off or even decreases at high intensity
exercise.
Key words
Exercise - metabolism - oral glucose - stable isotopes