Effects of Probiotic Supplementation on Sports Performance and Performance-Related Features in Athletes: A Systematic Review.
Mirella Di DioPatrizia CalellaConcetta Paola PelulloFabrizio LiguoriValeria Di OnofrioFrancesca GallèGiorgio LiguoriPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2023)
This review aims to evaluate the effects of probiotic supplementation on performance and performance-related conditions in athletes by evaluating randomized controlled studies from the MEDLINE (Pubmed), Web of Science, Scopus, and SPORTDiscus (EBSCO) databases. From a total of 2304 relevant articles, 13 studies fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Seven studies concern endurance athletes, one to rugby players, three refer to non-specified athletes, one to badminton players, and one involves baseball players. The evidence suggests that the integration of athletes' diets with some bacterial strains and also the consumption of multi-strain compounds may lead to an improvement in performance and can positively affect performance-related aspects such as fatigue, muscle pain, body composition, and cardiorespiratory fitness. However, the type of supplementation and sport is very variable among the studies examined. Therefore, to obtain more solid evidence, further controlled and comparable studies are needed to expand the research regarding the possible repercussions of probiotics use on athletes' performance.
Keyphrases
- high school
- body composition
- case control
- resistance training
- public health
- skeletal muscle
- escherichia coli
- high intensity
- machine learning
- open label
- randomized controlled trial
- spinal cord injury
- weight loss
- neuropathic pain
- artificial intelligence
- phase ii
- postmenopausal women
- bacillus subtilis
- placebo controlled