Gliclazide MR before exercise improves performance and recovery markers in strength-trained men
This randomized, placebo-controlled trial investigated the acute effects of a single 90 mg dose of gliclazide modified release (MR) taken 8 hours before exercise in 44 strength-trained men. The primary outcome was not reported; secondary outcomes included performance, muscle damage markers, inflammation, and recovery measures assessed 24-48 hours post-exercise.
Compared to placebo, gliclazide MR was associated with significant improvements in total volume-load for bench press (23.3% increase, p < 0.001) and squat (23.2% increase, p < 0.001). Range of motion improved slightly (1.1-1.6%). Markers of muscle damage (CK-MM: -13.2%; LDH: -12.8%), inflammation (TNF-α: -17.4%; IL-6: -5.3%), and perceived muscle soreness (-17.7%) were significantly reduced, while recovery scores improved by 32.5% (p = 0.001). Absolute numbers for these outcomes were not reported.
Safety monitoring noted hypoglycemia events in 3 participants receiving gliclazide. Serious adverse events, discontinuations, and tolerability were not reported. Key limitations include the small, homogeneous sample of young, strength-trained men, the single-dose, acute study design, and the lack of reported primary outcome and absolute effect numbers. Funding and conflicts of interest were not reported.
The study suggests a potential acute effect of gliclazide MR on exercise performance and recovery, but its clinical relevance for patient populations, including those with diabetes, is unknown. The observed hypoglycemia risk underscores that this is an experimental finding not ready for clinical application outside of rigorous research settings.