Is beta-alanine useful for distance runners? – Canadian Running Magazine
Is beta-alanine useful for distance runners? Canadian Running Magazine
Beta-alanine is a competition-legal supplement that is not well known but is gaining popularity in the running community. The supplement, which can be taken in …
Beta-alanine is a competition-legal supplement that is not well known but is gaining popularity in the running community. The supplement, which can be taken in pill or powder form, can help muscle endurance during high-intensity activity, meaning it can increase a runner’s lactate threshold. Because beta-alanine functions as a lactic acid buffer, it’s primarily considered beneficial for long sprinters to middle distance runners, but could the supplement be useful for long-distance runners as well?
Both the IAAF sports nutrition guide and Canadian physiologist Trent Stellingwerff recommend the supplement for distances from the 400m through 1,500m. In a summary on beta-alanine Stellingwerff says that especially from the long sprints to middle distances it can be beneficial for runners. He explains, “Fatigue during long-sprints to middle-distance racing (400m to 1500m), or any maximum intensity exercise lasting from ~1 to 10 min, is a consequence of the limitations imposed by anaerobic metabolism.” What beta-alanine does is help to delay this fatigue.
RELATED: The five supplements that can have performance benefits for runners
A study done by biomedical researchers in Leuven, Belgium suggests that beta-alanine could be useful in longer sit-and-kick-style race. They found that following a nearly two-hour cycling session, those who had taken beta-alanine were more effective in a finishing sprint.
Authors said, “We observed here for the first time that such beta-alanine administration regimen enhances sprint power output at the end of a simulated endurance race and therefore could be an effective strategy to improve sprint performance in a real-life competition.”
RELATED: Why you should race a 10K before your marathon
In events over 1,500m, it’s unlikely that beta-alanine is the supplement you’re looking for. While it could be of assistance for your finishing sprint in a 5K, if you’re looking to run a consistent pace in the marathon, it probably won’t help you.