2025 : 9 : 29

Maryam Naghibzadeh

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
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Education: PhD.
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Faculty: Literature and Humanities
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Research

Title
The effect of Zingiber officinale (ginger) on lactate dehydrogenase and fatigue index in obese women following eccentric and concentric exercise
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Zingiber officinale Lactate dehydrogenase Exercise fatigue Eccentric exercise Concentric exercise Obesity
Year
2025
Journal Journal of Exercise & Organ Cross Talk
DOI
Researchers Asma Soleimani ، Mahtab Najafi ، Maryam Naghibzadeh

Abstract

This study investigated the effects of 4-week Zingiber officinale (ginger) supplementation (1 g/day) on serum lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) dynamics and fatigue perception in obese women (BMI >30 kg/m²; n=50) following acute eccentric and concentric exercise. Participants were stratified by VO₂max and allocated to: ginger+eccentric (G+E), ginger+concentric (G+C), placebo+eccentric (P+E), placebo+concentric (P+C), or control (no intervention). Following supplementation, participants completed treadmill-based eccentric (-10% to -15% incline) or concentric (+10% to +15% incline) protocols to volitional exhaustion. Fasted venous blood samples quantified serum LDH; fatigue was assessed via Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS). ANCOVA with baseline adjustment revealed: Significant LDH elevation post-exercise (η²=0.62, P<0.001), with eccentric > concentric (Δ28.3±6.2 vs. Δ18.5±5.9 U/L; P=0.008). Ginger attenuated LDH vs. placebo (mean reduction: -21.8 U/L, 95% CI: -30.1 to -13.5; P<0.001, η²=0.42), particularly after eccentric exercise (G+E vs. P+E: -24.7 U/L, P=0.002). Non-significant FSS increase overall (η²=0.09, P=0.12), though ginger reduced FSS elevation by 41% vs. placebo (Δ8.7±3.9 vs. Δ14.8±5.2; P=0.07), with strongest attenuation in G+E (-9.3 units; P=0.052). Four-week ginger supplementation significantly mitigates exercise-induced LDH release in obese women, indicating cytoprotective effects against muscular stress. While fatigue modulation was statistically non-significant, clinically relevant attenuation trends suggest potential ergogenic benefits requiring further investigation