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Acute Impact of Polyphenol-Rich vs. Carbohydrate-Rich Foods and Beverages on Exercise-Induced ROS and FRAP in Healthy Sedentary Female Adults-A Randomized Controlled Trial

  • Markus Gassner (Corresponding author)
  • , Laura Bragagna
  • , Helia Heidari Dasht Bayaz
  • , Caroline Stumpf-Knaus
  • , Laura Schlosser
  • , Julia Lemberg
  • , Julia Brem
  • , Marc Pignitter
  • , Matthias Strauss
  • , Karl-Heinz Wagner
  • , Daniel König (Corresponding author)
  • , Caroline Susanne Knaus

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

Polyphenols and carbohydrates may modulate exercise-induced oxidative stress through distinct mechanisms: polyphenols via antioxidative properties, and carbohydrates via improved rapidly available energy supply. This randomized controlled trial (RCT) compared the acute effects of polyphenol-rich foods (pomegranate juice, blueberries), carbohydrate-rich foods (whole-grain bread, bread roll) and water control on HIIT-induced changes in ROS and FRAP in thirty healthy females. We conducted an RCT with two parallel intervention cohorts (study arm one: blueberries, whole-grain bread, bread roll, water (control); study arm two: pomegranate juice, water (control)), in which participants completed single-dose intervention days following 12 h fasting. On each intervention day, ROS and FRAP were assessed at baseline, pre-HIIT, post-HIIT and after 15 min recovery. Carbohydrate intake significantly reduced FRAP elevations (-2.16% (p < 0.05)) vs. polyphenols (-2.49% vs. water (p < 0.01) from pre-HIIT to post-HIIT). Furthermore, carbohydrate intake showed a tendency toward attenuating the exercise-induced increase in ROS (-7.75%, p = 0.095, vs. polyphenols from pre-HIIT to post-HIIT), although this did not reach statistical significance. Polyphenol-rich foods accelerated ROS reduction during the 15 min recovery phase (-8.22% (p < 0.01) vs. carbohydrates). No significant differences compared to water were observed from pre-HIIT to post-HIIT (polyphenols: p > 0.05; carbohydrates: p > 0.05) or from post-HIIT to 15 min post-HIIT (polyphenols: p > 0.05; carbohydrates: p > 0.05), which could be expected under fasted HIIT conditions. Overall, carbohydrates mitigated oxidative stress during exercise, whereas polyphenol-rich foods supported short-term post-exercise recovery.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1481
JournalAntioxidants
Volume14
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 10 Dec 2025

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 303009 Nutritional sciences
  • 104009 Food chemistry
  • 106002 Biochemistry

Keywords

  • carbohydrates
  • polyphenols
  • exercise-induced oxidative stress
  • blueberries
  • ROS
  • pomegranate juice
  • FRAP
  • resistance exercise
  • HIIT

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