Could the smell of chocolate wafting through the gym make strength training
easier, or at least more pleasant? A new Frontiers in Physiology study
found that sniffing dark chocolate with a high cocoa content decreased feelings
of hunger, desire and intention to eat, and left trainees feeling fuller.
"Exposing moderately trained men to chocolate odors right before and
between sets of resistance exercise significantly increased their overall
training volume without increasing their perceived exertion," said senior
author Dr. Mohamed Nashrudin bin Naharudin, an assistant professor at the
Faculty of Sports and Exercise Science at the University of Malaya.
"Seeing a substantial increase in repetitions without the athletes
feeling like they were exerting themselves any harder is a fascinating
psychobiological outcome."
The participant sample consisted of 23 healthy, moderately trained men in
their early to mid-20s. Divided into three groups, they were provided one of
three odor samples: liquefied dark chocolate containing 90% cocoa, liquefied
milk chocolate containing 60% cocoa, or a water sample serving as a control.
"We know olfaction is powerfully wired into the brain's appetite and
emotion networks, but surprisingly, no study has systematically looked at the
three-way interaction between smell, appetite and actual resistance exercise
capacity," said Naharudin.
Different scents, different effects
Participants had not eaten for at least 10 hours before performing leg
extensions, a resistance training exercise performed by sitting down and
extending the lower legs to lift a weight upward. Leg extension performance was
assessed before and during their training.
Hunger, fullness, desire to eat and plans to eat in the near future were
reported before the leg workout. During the sets, only hunger and desire to eat
were measured, each after 30 seconds of exposure to a scent sample.
These measurements showed that both chocolate types had clear but different
effects on appetite-related measures. Relative to the water control and milk
chocolate samples, sniffing dark chocolate consistently led to participants
reporting less hunger, reduced desire and intention to eat, and greater
fullness before exercise.
This smell predominantly suppressed appetite by reducing hunger and
increasing fullness. In contrast, those smelling the milk chocolate sample
reported higher odor pleasantness compared with dark chocolate and water
samples, but no changes in hunger or appetite.
Smelling chocolate samples affected not only appetite-related measures, but
also performance.
"Sniffing a 90% dark chocolate odor added about 18 more repetitions to
participants' leg extensions, while a 60% milk chocolate odor added about nine
repetitions compared with the water control," said Naharudin.
How smell may mimic eating
Ready, steady, eat
The researchers think these changes in appetite perception could be related
to what we learn about smells from a young age. Learned cues, such as foods
we've eaten before, generate expectations about what happens after eating and
can cause a shift from hunger toward perceived fullness.
"The dark chocolate scent serves as a learned cue for a rich, bitter
and highly satiating food, which essentially tricks the system into an
anticipatory state of fullness," said Naharudin. "Conversely, the
sweeter milk chocolate scent acts more like a hedonic reward cue, enhancing
training volume by creating a highly pleasant sensory environment rather than
by shifting basic metabolic hunger signals."
These effects suggest that anticipation of food could have similar effects
to its actual consumption, particularly because they're observable when people
haven't eaten. Food scents might kick-start the digestive process or trigger
changes in body and mind that occur in anticipation of a meal. These changes
closely mimic some of the psychological and physiological shifts typically
brought on by actual eating.
Limits of the chocolate effect
The authors pointed out that their claims remain inferential, as no blood
hormones or neural pathways were measured. Additionally, there may have been
slight variations in smell intensity between the chocolate samples, and the
water sample was odorless, which could have given participants clues about
whether they were part of the control group.
Finally, more diverse participant samples are needed to confirm these
findings.
This leads to the question of whether chocolate is the only food that can
trigger such responses.
"We don't think chocolate is entirely unique, though it is a food cue with incredibly strong, universally recognized reward associations," Naharudin concluded. Although this hasn't been tested yet, other foods strongly linked to satiety could show similar effects. "A person likely needs to find the odor familiar and appealing—or at least not repulsive—to trigger the psychological shift in appetite that's needed to see a performance boost."
Provided by Frontiers
Source: The smell of dark chocolate could make a leg workout easier, even on an empty stomach

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