Study finds that after drinking ASEA for one week, athletes experienced shift in 43 metabolites
Salt Lake City, Utah -- ASEA, LLC announces the release of groundbreaking findings at the Experimental Biology 2012 Conference in San Diego of a new study from the Human Performance Laboratory showing increased power output and endurance among competitive athletes.
The study supervised by Dr. David C. Nieman, DrPH, FACSM at the Human Performance Laboratory, Appalachian State University, found that after drinking ASEA athletes experienced massive free-fatty acid mobilization in the blood PRIOR to exercise to a level normally found only after heavy exercise.
"These are very significant findings," said Nieman. "Our research demonstrated that ASEA is causing mobilization of free-fatty acids PRIOR to exercise, making this source of fuel available at the outset of exercise or competitive performance. This has important implications, especially regarding glycogen sparing, which is something every athlete tries to achieve." Glycogen sparing is the use of non-carbohydrates as a source of energy during exercise so that the depletion of muscle glycogen is delayed. When glycogen is spared the body burns fats for energy, making a greater contribution to an athlete's efforts during the initial stages of a race. This leaves more glycogen for the later stages of racing or exercise, and muscle fatigue will be delayed.
The research found that after drinking ASEA for one week, athletes were experiencing a shift in 43 metabolites.
"We have rarely seen such a drastic difference. For 43 of those signals to change, that is a quarter of the metabolite profile that we are monitoring. It is a huge bump in metabolite shifts that are due to the ingestion of just one product," said Nieman.
What do these metabolite shifts mean for athletes?
"Athletes actually started the exercise after drinking ASEA with a lot more of these free-fatty acids in their blood. The reason that is important is that the muscles will actually use that as fuel, sparing the muscle glycogen and the use of amino acids which is what we found as we analyzed the data," said Nieman.
"Every understanding from the literature is that these probably came from the fat stores in the abdominal area," said Nieman. "So if you drink ASEA we found that the fats go up in the blood. If you're not exercising, those fats will still be used to support the body's metabolism for life."
Simply drinking ASEA for seven days mobilized fuel stores in the body from abdominal fat. For those that want to burn more fat during exercise ASEA is ideal. Even without exercise the freed up fat stores will be used by the body as fuel.
Although this is the first laboratory study of ASEA on athletes, many endurance athletes have been drinking ASEA and noticing improvements in their race times, recovery after racing/training, etc.
James
Lawrence, World Record, Most Triathlons 70.3 races, said,
"I've experienced all these tremendous benefits over
the last few years when I'm doing all these world records,
and maybe didn't understand it, but was fearful to go off
the product. With this new study it's really helped me understand
why I don't get sore, and why I'm able to just lock
in this strong pace and hold it for so long."
Cody
Waite, Professional Xterra Triathlete, had this to say
about Dr. Nieman's study. "My thoughts on the study
are that I kind of already knew this through my own experience
with the product. But at the same time it's great to have
that solid evidence that laboratory test make official. That
gives it that official stamp of approval from the scientists
and then the stamp of approval from lead athletes."
Diana
MacManus,Three-Time National Swimming Champion said, "With
ASEA I've noticed that my times and my meets have improved
significantly. Learning about the research behind ASEA boosts
my confidence and reinforces what I already know."
Typically, muscle glycogen is reduced in the body during a
single or many groups of energy expenditures. For example,
during a single sprint muscle glycogen may deplete by 25%
to 30% of the resting levels. Similarly, at the end of longer
durations (60 to 90 minutes) of high, moderate and low exercise
muscle, glycogen will be dramatically reduced or depleted.
The study included 20 fit athletes in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-based, cross-over study. After baseline testing for VO2Max and body composition, one-half of the athletes drank four ounces of ASEA each day for seven days. The other one-half of the athletes drank four ounces of a placebo for seven days. Then all athletes completed a 75-km cycling trial, with blood drawn prior to the trial, immediately after the trial and one hour after the trial.
After a "washout" period in which none of the athletes drank ASEA or the placebo, a seven day cross-over study was conducted. The original ASEA group drank the placebo and the original placebo group drank ASEA for a seven day period. Then all athletes completed a second 75-km cycling trial, with blood drawn prior to the trial, immediately after the trial and one hour after the trial.
The research demonstrated that drinking ASEA taps into the body's largest energy reserves, freeing fatty acids from adipose tissue, BEFORE exercise or athletic competition.
"This unexpected mobilization of fatty acids in theory will lead to better endurance in athletes, assisting athletes to maintain a certain pace for longer periods of time," said Nieman.
The research found that the release of fatty acids is coming from fatty adipose tissue, the body's source of abundant, available energy. Adipose tissue is fat stored around the organs of the body, with the most common and largest fat store being the abdominal area. Adipose tissue triglycerides represent the largest energy reserve in the human body. Utilizing these stores is critical for prolonged endurance exercise.
The study also demonstrated that the athletes in the study experienced a massive increase in blood levels of ascorbic acid (vitamin C) after exercise. This could indicate less oxidative stress on muscles. Further research is being conducted to determine the implications of this increase.
"This study is the latest in ASEA's commitment to ongoing research. The frontiers of redox signaling molecules and ASEA are constantly being pushed. This latest study is not a destination, but an on-ramp," said Verdis Norton, Chief Executive Officer at ASEA.
ASEA and Redox Signaling Molecules
ASEA,
with its Redox Signaling technology, is a powerful new drink
that helps both competitive and recreational athletes step
up their game to new levels of performance.
ASEA is the original and only Redox Signaling product available today. It provides the body with two perfectly balanced sets of reactive molecules -- the same molecules produced naturally by the mitochondria in every cell of the body. These vitally important molecules support the production of the ATP energy that fuels our cells, help activate antioxidants, minimize cellular damage, enhance cellular communication, and speed the healing response -- all functions critical to athletic performance, endurance and recovery.
Redox Signaling is a burgeoning scientific field on a global scale with an impressive array of recent research advances. Only recently have ASEA scientists been able to produce stable mixtures of these Redox Signaling molecules outside living cells.
Athletic Reviews: Increased Performance, Endurance & Recovery
ASEA is used by these athletes to increase their competitive advantages. These athletes have all seen performance gains while drinking ASEA, especially quicker recovery times which allows them to get back to training sooner. [See ASEA Athlete Profiles for their stories.]
" James Lawrence, Professional Ironman Tri-Athlete (Competing in 30 Ironman in 2012 to set record)
" Rich Roll, Professional Ironman Tri-athlete and voted one of the fittest men in America
" Andrés Castillo, Professional Ironman Tri-athlete
" Adam Biel, Endurance Athlete competing to break Pan-American Cycling Speed record
" Cody Waite, Off-road Extrerra Tri-Athlete Craig Stanton, Motorsports Race Car Driver
" Danny Bopp, NASCAR Driver
" Josh Horowitz, Wonderful Pistachios Cycling Team
" Diana McManus, US Masters Swimmer
" Ragga Ragnars, Olympic swimmer from Iceland
Human Performance Laboratory
The mission of the ASU/NCRC Human Performance Laboratory is to investigate the influence of unique plant molecules (e.g, flavonoids such as quercetin, luteolin, and epigallocatechin 3-gallate or EGCG) on age-related loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia), muscle mitochondrial biogenesis, and exercise-induced changes in immune function, oxidative stress, and inflammation. The Human Performance Laboratory is located at Appalachian State University North Carolina Research Campus and is affiliated with the North Carolina Research Institute which brings together eight universities as well as researchers at Dole, General Foods and Monsanto.
The Company and Product
ASEA, LLC is a Salt Lake City-based company whose flagship product, also called ASEA, is the world's first and only source of stable, balanced, native-to-the-body Redox Signaling molecules.
ASEA is sold in a 32-ounce bottle and an eight-ounce flexible
pouch made from environmentally friendly materials. The 32-ounce
bottle is made from a durable plastic. The eight-ounce flexible
pouch fits easily into a backpack, pocket or in athletic gear.
Both packages were created from input from competitive athletes
and everyday ASEA consumers. The eight-ounce pouch includes
a one-way valve to keep the pouch contents clean and pure.
Rich Roll - Co-Founder
of ULTRAMAN Triathlon
5 Triathlons 5 Days in a Row!!!
Rated one of the Top 25 Fittest Guys in the World by Men's
Fitness Magazine
Video Interview
with Human Performance Laboratory Scientists
DOWNLOAD
Metabolites Study
(PDF document)
DOWNLOAD
Research Study Summary
(PDF document)