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Thread: Ribose anyone?

  1. #1
    Garbanzo Dude is offline Member
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    Ribose anyone?

    Went over to my friends house to work out he made me a pre-workout drink with ribose, BCAA"S and some CEE......MAN WHAT A GREAT RUSH OF ENERGY......he credits putting a 1.5 grams of ribose mixed with H20 and few small ounces of fresh grapefruit juice....and the above mentioned goodies.....

  2. #2
    Garbanzo Dude is offline Member
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    30 views and no one cares to comment?? hmm....whats the deal ribose???

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    bobsappfan is offline Associate Member
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  4. #4
    jimmyinkedup's Avatar
    jimmyinkedup is offline Disappointment* Known SCAMMER - Do Not Trust *
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    Ribose on paper sounds good. Its an essential componnet of ATP ..blah blah blah. Its a sugar..the body makes it from glucose. The thoery it may benfit is there...but the reality is..it doesnt deliver.


    Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2005 Dec;15(6):653-64.
    Effects of ribose supplementation prior to and during intense exercise on anaerobic capacity and metabolic markers.
    Kerksick C, Rasmussen C, Bowden R, Leutholtz B, Harvey T, Earnest C, Greenwood M, Almada A, Kreider R.

    Exercise and Sport Nutrition Laboratory, Center for Exercise, Nutrition and Preventive Health Research, Dept of Health, Human Performance and Recreation, Baylor University, Waco, TX 76798-7313, USA.

    This study examined whether ribose supplementation before and during intense anaerobic exercise impacts anaerobic capacity and metabolic markers. Twelve moderately trained male cyclists (22.3 +/- 2.2 y; 181 +/- 6 cm, 74.8 +/- 9 kg) participated in the study. Subjects were familiarized and fasted for 8 h after standardizing nutritional intake. In a double blind and crossover manner subjects ingested either a 150 mL placebo or ribose (3 g ribose + 150 microg folate). Subjects rested for 25 min and completed 5 x 30 s anaerobic capacity tests with 3 min passive rest. Six capillary blood samples were taken prior to and after sprints for adenine nucleotide breakdown determination. The experiment was repeated 1 wk later with alternative drink. Data were analyzed by repeated measures ANOVA. No significant interactions were observed for any performance or blood variables. D-ribose supplementation has no impact on anaerobic exercise capacity and metabolic markers after high-intensity cycling exercise.


    PMID: 16521849 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]




    J Strength Cond Res. 2003 Feb;17(1):47-52.
    Effects of ribose supplementation on repeated sprint performance in men.
    Berardi JM, Ziegenfuss TN.

    Applied Physiology Laboratory, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan 48197, USA. [email protected]

    This study used a randomized, placebo-controlled, crossover design to evaluate the effects of oral ribose supplementation on short-term anaerobic performance. After familiarization, subjects performed 2 bouts of repeated cycle sprint exercise (six 10-second sprints with 60-second rest periods between sprints) in a single day. After the second exercise, bout subjects ingested 32 g of ribose or cellulose (4 x 8-g doses) during the next 36 hours. After supplementation, subjects returned to the laboratory to perform a single bout of cycle sprinting (as described above). After a 5-day washout period, subjects repeated the protocol, receiving the opposite supplement treatment. Ribose supplementation lead to statistically significant increases in mean power and peak power in sprint 2 (10.9 and 6.6%, respectively) and higher (although not significant) absolute values in sprints 1, 3, and 4. In conclusion, ribose supplementation did not show reproducible increases in performance across all 6 sprints. Therefore, within the framework of this investigation, it appears that ribose supplementation does not have a consistent or substantial effect on anaerobic cycle sprinting.

    PMID: 12580655 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



    Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2003 Mar;13(1):76-86.Links
    Effects of oral D-ribose supplementation on anaerobic capacity and selected metabolic markers in healthy males.
    Kreider RB, Melton C, Greenwood M, Rasmussen C, Lundberg J, Earnest C, Almada A.

    Exercise and Sport Nutrition Laboratory, Center for Exercise, Nutrition and Preventative Health, in the Department of Health, Human Performance and Recreation at Baylor University, Waco, TX 76798-7313, USA.

    Oral D-ribose supplementation has been reported to increase adenine nucleotide synthesis and exercise capacity in certain clinical populations. Theoretically, increasing adenine nucleotide availability may enhance high intensity exercise capacity. This study evaluated the potential ergogenic value of D-ribose supplementation on repetitive high-intensity exercise capacity in 19 trained males. Subjects were familiarized to the testing protocol and performed two practice-testing trials before pre-supplementation testing. Each test involved warming up for 5 min on a cycle ergometer and then performing two 30-s Wingate anaerobic sprint tests on a computerized cycle ergometer separated by 3 min of rest recovery. In the pre- and post-supplementation trials, blood samples were obtained at rest, immediately following the first and second sprints, and following 5 min of recovery from exercise. Subjects were then matched according to body mass and anaerobic capacity and assigned to ingest, in a randomized and double blind manner, capsules containing either 5 g of a dextrose placebo (P) or D-ribose (R) twice daily (10 g/d) for 5 d. Subjects then performed post-supplementation tests on the 6th day. Data were analyzed by ANOVA for repeated measures. Results revealed a significant interaction (p =.04) in total work output. Post hoc analysis revealed that work significantly declined (-18 +/- 51 J) during the second post-supplementation sprint in the P group while being maintained in the R group (-0.0 +/- 31 J). No significant interactions were observed in peak power, average power, torque, fatigue index, lactate, ammonia, glucose, or uric acid. Results indicate that oral ribose supplementation (10 g/d for 5 d) does not affect anaerobic exercise capacity or metabolic markers in trained subjects as evaluated in this study.

    PMID: 12660407 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]


    Oh i should add..i tried this years ago. I dont know what it costs now but then it was expensive..and it didnt do sh*t.
    Last edited by jimmyinkedup; 03-15-2011 at 10:33 PM.

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