Journal article
N-Acetylcysteine infusion does not affect glucose disposal during prolonged moderate-intensity exercise in humans
TL Merry, GD Wadley, CG Stathis, AP Garnham, S Rattigan, M Hargreaves, GK McConell
Journal of Physiology | Published : 2010
Abstract
There is evidence that reactive oxygen species (ROS) signalling is required for normal increases in glucose uptake during contraction of isolated mouse skeletal muscle, and that AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK) is involved. The aim of this study was to determine whether ROS signalling is involved in the regulation of glucose disposal and AMPK activation during moderate-intensity exercise in humans. Nine healthy males completed 80 min of cycle ergometry at 62 ± 1% of peak oxygen consumption (A 6,6-2H-glucose tracer was infused at rest and during exercise, and in a double-blind randomised cross-over design, N-acetylcysteine (NAC) or saline (CON) was co-infused. NAC was infused at 125 mg kg-..
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