scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P6179 | Dimensions Publication ID | 1049790701 |
P356 | DOI | 10.2165/00007256-200333120-00004 |
P698 | PubMed publication ID | 12974658 |
P2093 | author name string | Mark Juhn | |
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Caffeine Ingestion and Performance of a 1,500-Metre Swim | Q71972801 | ||
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Creatine monohydrate supplementation enhances high-intensity exercise performance in males and females | Q73250977 | ||
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Creatine use among a select population of high school athletes | Q73320003 | ||
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Androstenedione does not stimulate muscle protein anabolism in young healthy men | Q73351473 | ||
Public health officials caution against ephedra use. Health officials caution consumers against using dietary supplements containing ephedra. The stimulant can have dangerous effects on the nervous system and heart | Q73494514 | ||
Detection of recombinant human erythropoietin abuse in athletes utilizing markers of altered erythropoiesis | Q73554169 | ||
Does exogenous coenzyme Q10 affect aerobic capacity in endurance athletes? | Q73673353 | ||
Effect of androgenic anabolic steroids on sperm quality and serum hormone levels in adult male bodybuilders | Q73676262 | ||
A novel method utilising markers of altered erythropoiesis for the detection of recombinant human erythropoietin abuse in athletes | Q73931535 | ||
Pyruvate ingestion for 7 days does not improve aerobic performance in well-trained individuals | Q74113216 | ||
Oral creatine supplementation and upper extremity anaerobic response in females | Q74346472 | ||
Renal dysfunction accompanying oral creatine supplements | Q74716092 | ||
Effect of caffeinated drinks on substrate metabolism, caffeine excretion, and performance | Q74831916 | ||
Trends in the misuse of androgenic anabolic steroids among boys 16-17 years old in a primary health care area in Sweden | Q77134008 | ||
Pyruvate: beyond the marketing hype | Q77300425 | ||
Caffeine, performance, and metabolism during repeated Wingate exercise tests | Q77369315 | ||
Short-term vitamin E supplementation before marathon running: a placebo-controlled trial | Q77727956 | ||
No effect of antioxidant supplementation in triathletes on maximal oxygen uptake, 31P-NMRS detected muscle energy metabolism and muscle fatigue | Q77762976 | ||
Oral creatine supplementation in male collegiate athletes: a survey of dosing habits and side effects | Q77764649 | ||
Anabolic steroid-induced hepatotoxicity: is it overstated? | Q77770464 | ||
Oral creatine supplementation and athletic performance: a critical review | Q77783604 | ||
Effects of branched-chain amino acids and carbohydrate on fatigue during intermittent, high-intensity running | Q78143027 | ||
Creatine and beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate (HMB) additively increase lean body mass and muscle strength during a weight-training program | Q33953546 | ||
Caffeine and nutrition | Q33975748 | ||
Antioxidants: what role do they play in physical activity and health? | Q33987471 | ||
Blood boosting and sport | Q33995515 | ||
Beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate (HMB) supplementation and the promotion of muscle growth and strength | Q34019191 | ||
Dietary androgen 'supplements': separating substance from hype | Q34093725 | ||
Anabolic steroids: a review for the clinician | Q34121676 | ||
Correlations of growth hormone (GH) and insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I): effects of exercise and abuse by athletes | Q34183577 | ||
Protein requirements and muscle mass/strength changes during intensive training in novice bodybuilders | Q34254062 | ||
Safety aspects of growth hormone replacement in adults. | Q34319029 | ||
Growth hormone and exercise: physiology, use and abuse | Q34349480 | ||
Effect of erythropoietin on cardiovascular diseases. | Q34384666 | ||
Caffeine and exercise: metabolism, endurance and performance | Q34388646 | ||
Muscle creatine loading in men. | Q34399513 | ||
Pseudoephedrine is without ergogenic effects during prolonged exercise | Q34415271 | ||
Antioxidants in exercise nutrition | Q34438920 | ||
Oral creatine supplementation and skeletal muscle metabolism in physical exercise | Q34994342 | ||
Effects on thermal stress and exercise on blood volume in humans | Q39813357 | ||
Leukocyte activation, erythrocyte damage, lipid profile and oxidative stress imposed by high competition physical exercise in adolescents | Q40715853 | ||
American College of Sports Medicine roundtable. The physiological and health effects of oral creatine supplementation | Q40772518 | ||
Potential side effects of oral creatine supplementation: a critical review | Q40829125 | ||
Erythropoietin: physico- and biochemical analysis | Q41321987 | ||
Muscular and cardiorespiratory effects of pseudoephedrine in human athletes | Q41611961 | ||
Do pseudoephedrine or phenylpropanolamine improve maximum oxygen uptake and time to exhaustion? | Q42548153 | ||
Muscle soreness and damage parameters after prolonged intermittent shuttle-running following acute vitamin C supplementation. | Q43547417 | ||
Creatine loading does not impact on stroke performance in tennis | Q43547419 | ||
A randomized efficacy and safety trial of oxandrolone in the treatment of Duchenne dystrophy | Q43587035 | ||
Little effect of caffeine ingestion on repeated sprints in team-sport athletes | Q43589292 | ||
Anabolic steroids increase exercise tolerance | Q43606120 | ||
Addition of protein and amino acids to carbohydrates does not enhance postexercise muscle glycogen synthesis | Q43678647 | ||
Effect of caffeine and ephedrine ingestion on anaerobic exercise performance | Q43688835 | ||
Metabolism of orally administered androstenedione in young men. | Q43705637 | ||
Effects of acute creatine monohydrate supplementation on leucine kinetics and mixed-muscle protein synthesis | Q43710029 | ||
Adolescent use of anabolic-androgenic steroids and relations to self-reports of social, personality and health aspects | Q43753865 | ||
Beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate (HMB) supplementation does not affect changes in strength or body composition during resistance training in trained men. | Q43765407 | ||
Changes of tissue creatine concentrations upon oral supplementation of creatine-monohydrate in various animal species | Q43772776 | ||
Effects of creatine supplementation on isometric force-time curve characteristics | Q43786866 | ||
Creatine supplementation in high school football players | Q43830641 | ||
Analysis of over-the-counter dietary supplements | Q43830643 | ||
Effect of ingesting caffeine and ephedrine on 10-km run performance | Q43877137 | ||
Acute creatine supplementation and performance during a field test simulating match play in elite female soccer players. | Q43981829 | ||
Involvement of DARPP-32 phosphorylation in the stimulant action of caffeine | Q44104351 | ||
A moderate dose of pseudoephedrine does not alter muscle contraction strength or anaerobic power | Q44238897 | ||
Use of Ephedra-containing products and risk for hemorrhagic stroke | Q44276750 | ||
Physiological, subjective and performance effects of pseudoephedrine and phenylpropanolamine during endurance running exercise | Q44312599 | ||
Enhancement of arm exercise endurance capacity with dihydroxyacetone and pyruvate | Q44656048 | ||
Increase of total creatine in human brain after oral supplementation of creatine-monohydrate | Q48114355 | ||
Adverse events of erythropoietin in long-term and in acute/short-term treatment | Q50122414 | ||
beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate (HMB) supplementation in humans is safe and may decrease cardiovascular risk factors. | Q51076943 | ||
Enhanced leg exercise endurance with a high-carbohydrate diet and dihydroxyacetone and pyruvate. | Q53916511 | ||
Use of creatine and other supplements by members of civilian and military health clubs: a cross-sectional survey. | Q54036118 | ||
Nutritional supplementation of the leucine metabolite beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate (hmb) during resistance training. | Q54037648 | ||
Effect of oral DHEA on serum testosterone and adaptations to resistance training in young men. | Q54068451 | ||
Resistance training reduces the acute exercise-induced increase in muscle protein turnover. | Q54108942 | ||
Comparison of caffeine and theophylline ingestion: exercise metabolism and endurance. | Q54134183 | ||
Effect of growth hormone and resistance exercise on muscle growth and strength in older men. | Q54180544 | ||
Creatine supplementation and sprint performance in soccer players. | Q55033667 | ||
The Andro Project: physiological and hormonal influences of androstenedione supplementation in men 35 to 65 years old participating in a high-intensity resistance training program. | Q55034382 | ||
Joint Position Statement: nutrition and athletic performance. American College of Sports Medicine, American Dietetic Association, and Dietitians of Canada. | Q55034476 | ||
Effect of testosterone on muscle mass and muscle protein synthesis. | Q55060315 | ||
The Effect of Different Dosages of Caffeine on Endurance Performance Time | Q56611050 | ||
Nutrition antioxidant status and oxidative stress in professional basketball players: effects of a three compound antioxidative supplement | Q56649786 | ||
Normal hematological values for healthy persons living at 4000 meters in Bolivia | Q57111443 | ||
Effects of erythropoietin administration in training athletes and possible indirect detection in doping control | Q57114312 | ||
What price the Olympian ideal? | Q59089881 | ||
Benefits of caffeine ingestion on sprint performance in trained and untrained swimmers | Q68134378 | ||
Effects of anaemia and stepwise-induced polycythaemia on maximal aerobic power in individuals with high and low haemoglobin concentrations | Q68979375 | ||
Dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA) | Q71692892 | ||
Creatine supplementation does not improve sprint performance in competitive swimmers | Q71812211 | ||
P433 | issue | 12 | |
P304 | page(s) | 921-939 | |
P577 | publication date | 2003-01-01 | |
P1433 | published in | Sports Medicine | Q15762097 |
P1476 | title | Popular sports supplements and ergogenic aids | |
P478 | volume | 33 |
Q38797814 | A Retrospective Study of Clinical Effects of Powdered Caffeine Exposures Reported to Three US Poison Control Centers |
Q34991947 | Acute effects of a thermogenic nutritional supplement on cycling time to exhaustion and muscular strength in college-aged men |
Q64900631 | Awareness of the Consumption of Dietary Supplements among Students in a University in Saudi Arabia. |
Q34359353 | Caffeine and ephedrine: physiological, metabolic and performance-enhancing effects |
Q58815028 | Comment on Point:Counterpoint “In health and in a normoxic environment, V̇o2 max is/is not limited primarily by cardiac output and locomotor muscle blood flow” |
Q37352640 | Consumption of dietary caffeine and coffee in physically active populations: physiological interactions |
Q47136415 | Current Status of Legislation on Dietary Products for Sportspeople in a European Framework. |
Q34148644 | Dietary Supplements and Team-Sport Performance |
Q36428701 | Effect of taking dietary supplement on hematological and biochemical parameters in male bodybuilders an equation model |
Q28295716 | Emerging drugs for sarcopenia: age-related muscle wasting |
Q41251269 | Growth hormone 1 (GH1) gene and performance and post-race rectal temperature during the South African Ironman triathlon |
Q39639575 | Highly sensitive avidin-biotin ELISA for detection of nandrolone and testosterone in dietary supplements. |
Q41692867 | Identifying and assessing views among physically-active adult gym members in Israel on dietary supplements |
Q33905686 | Illicit anabolic-androgenic steroid use |
Q24649521 | Long-term psychiatric and medical consequences of anabolic-androgenic steroid abuse: a looming public health concern? |
Q35334367 | Nutritional supplement practices in UK junior national track and field athletes |
Q90230940 | Oxymetholone-Induced Acute Renal Failure: A Case Report |
Q36407054 | Performance enhancement with supplements: incongruence between rationale and practice. |
Q37129373 | Post-exercise branched chain amino acid supplementation does not affect recovery markers following three consecutive high intensity resistance training bouts compared to carbohydrate supplementation |
Q33578693 | Prevalence of Dietary Supplements Use among Gymnasium Users |
Q46106187 | Quantitative analysis of powdered caffeine products purchased from the Internet using liquid chromatography-quadrupole time-of-flight mass spectrometry |
Q35099566 | Relationship of high school and college sports participation with alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drug use: a review |
Q93095549 | Separation of ephedrine and pseudoephedrine enantiomers using a polysaccharide-based chiral column: A normal phase liquid chromatography-high-resolution mass spectrometry approach |
Q35865616 | Supplement use in sport: is there a potentially dangerous incongruence between rationale and practice? |
Q34591989 | Tea catechin ingestion combined with habitual exercise suppresses the aging-associated decline in physical performance in senescence-accelerated mice |
Q34194583 | The anabolic androgenic steroid nandrolone decanoate disrupts redox homeostasis in liver, heart and kidney of male Wistar rats. |
Q36767936 | The continuing story of nutritional supplements and doping infractions |
Q30361485 | The spirit of sport, morality, and hypoxic tents: logic and authenticity. |
Q36879349 | The use of nutritional supplements among male collegiate athletes |
Q51697415 | Tour de France, Giro, Vuelta, and classic European races show a unique progression of road cycling speed in the last 20 years. |
Q36916171 | Use of Dietary Supplements among Professional Athletes in Saudi Arabia |
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