Gluconeogenesis During Endurance Exercise in Cyclists Habituated to a Long‐Term Low Carbohydrate High‐Fat Diet

ByCrossFitNovember 10, 2019

The body derives glucose from three major sources:

  • Ingested glucose
  • Breakdown of liver glycogen stores (glycogenolysis, or GLY)
  • Conversion of amino acids, lactate, glycerol, and other fuels into glucose in the liver (gluconeogenesis, or GNG)

Muscles also rely on internal glycogen stores. During exercise, GLY increases rapidly as muscle glucose consumption increases and the liver attempts to maintain stable glucose levels. Individuals on low-carbohydrate diets have lower levels of ingested glucose and smaller liver and muscle glycogen stores. This 2016 trial investigated how athletes habituated to low-carb diets balance these different glucose sources to maintain sufficient blood glucose levels during exercise.

Seven healthy, well-trained male cyclists who had been eating a low-carb, high-fat diet (LCHF, on average 7% of calories from carbohydrate) for at least eight months were compared to seven matched controls adapted to higher-carb (Mixed, on average 55% of calories from carbohydrate) diets. Groups were matched for age, body weight, and athletic performance. Subjects were run through max-effort and sub-max-effort tests, with fuel oxidation and production measured throughout.

As might be expected, the two groups consumed a different balance of fuels during exercise. As shown in Figure 2 below, the Mixed diet group (high-carb) burned mostly carbohydrate for energy, with limited fat burning that increased over time. The LCHF group (low-carb), conversely, burned much less carbohydrate but much more fat at all stages of exercise. The total caloric value of burned fuels was roughly equivalent between groups.

Despite these differences, glucose, insulin, and lactate levels were roughly similar between groups at all time points in Mixed and LCHF subjects (with the exception of a spike in lactate toward the end of the test in the LCHF group). Circulating fat — free fatty acids, glycerol, and ketone (BHB) — levels, however, were consistently higher in the LCHF group (Figure 3).

Rates of glycogenolysis — that is, breakdown of liver glycogen to increase blood glucose — were higher in the Mixed diet group than the LCHF group both before and during exercise. Gluconeogenesis rates, however, were nearly identical (Figure 4).

Mixed diet subjects also burned significantly more muscle glycogen during exercise than did LCHF diet subjects. Both groups had similarly low levels of muscle glycogen after exercise, but prior to exercise, the Mixed diet subjects had significantly higher glycogen levels, indicating increased glycogen burn during the exercise period (Figure 5).

Both groups were able to meet their carbohydrate oxidation demands through a combination of muscle glycogen, hepatic glycogen (glycogenolysis), and gluconeogenesis. Total carbohydrate oxidation and production were both higher in the Mixed diet group, but the LCHF diet group produced sufficient carbohydrate to meet demand (Figure 6). Notably, nearly half (42%) of the carbohydrate burned by the LCHF diet group was derived from hepatic (liver-based) sources (either glycogenolysis or gluconeogenesis); in comparison, only 20% of burned carbohydrate in Mixed dieters was hepatically derived.

Taken together, this suggests both carbohydrate oxidation and production are significantly lower in LCHF dieters during exercise than in subjects following a Mixed diet. Both groups of athletes produced similar amounts of glucose from gluconeogenesis (though the source of this glucose likely differed, much of it coming from lactate in Mixed dieters, while LCHF dieters likely relied more heavily on glycerol). This suggests athletes following a higher-carbohydrate diet will burn significantly more glycogen in the liver and muscles during exercise. LCHF athletes compensate not by finding other sources of carbohydrate but by relying to a greater extent on fat oxidation to meet energetic demands.

It is worth noting these results were seen in subjects fully adapted to a low-carbohydrate diet. Athletes who have recently transitioned to a low-carbohydrate diet may perform similarly.


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