Whiff of Chocolate Before Workout May Curb Hunger, Lift Reps, New Study Shows

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Skipping breakfast before a gym session is hard enough. A new study points to an odd trick that might make the empty-stomach grind a little easier: a whiff of chocolate. Men who breathed in the scent of chocolate before and during a weight session cranked out more repetitions than they did after smelling plain water, and they managed it without rating the harder workout as any more punishing than usual.

No one ate a single square. Every bit of the boost came from smell alone. When the same men sniffed dark chocolate, they reported feeling less hungry and more full before lifting. When they sniffed milk chocolate, they mostly rated the scent as more pleasant. Both scents beat water on total reps completed.

Published in the journal Frontiers in Physiology, the research is preliminary, so it shows that the two happened together rather than nailing down exactly why. Still, the basic result is hard to ignore: a smell, and nothing more, nudged how much work tired muscles were willing to do.

How the Chocolate Smell Study Worked

Twenty-three healthy men took part at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. All were seasoned lifters, training at least twice a week for a minimum of two years, with an average age of about 23. Each showed up having fasted overnight for at least 10 hours, copying the state of someone who trains first thing in the morning on an empty stomach.

Each man completed three separate sessions spaced at least four days apart. One session paired the workout with the smell of dark chocolate (90% cocoa), another with milk chocolate, and a third with plain water for comparison. By design, neither the participants nor the staff counting reps were told which scent was which, a standard step to limit bias. Scents were prepared as liquids in small glass jars, and each man inhaled for 30 seconds at a time, both before lifting and between sets.

For the workout itself, participants did repeated sets of leg extensions, a seated machine move that targets the muscles at the front of the thigh, using a weight set to 80% of the most they could lift 10 times. They kept going until they couldn’t finish another set. After each set they rated how hungry they felt, how much they wanted to eat, how pleasant the smell was, and how hard the effort felt.

More Reps From the Chocolate Smell

Dark chocolate produced the biggest jump: 18 more total reps than water, and nine more than milk chocolate. Milk chocolate landed in the middle, beating water by nine reps. Counted in whole sets, dark chocolate added one full set over both the water and milk chocolate conditions.

Curiously, all that extra work didn’t register as extra suffering. Effort ratings climbed as the sets piled up, exactly as expected, but they came out about the same no matter which scent sat in the jar. The chocolate smells helped men grind out more without making any single set feel tougher.

Appetite is where the two scents parted ways. Dark chocolate reliably dialed down hunger and the urge to eat while raising the sense of fullness. Milk chocolate did none of that; it simply smelled better to the participants. Across every condition, the less hungry a man felt going in, the more reps he tended to finish.

What the Science Can’t Explain Yet

Researchers ran the numbers to see whether lower hunger or greater pleasantness could account for the extra reps. Those tests came back inconclusive. The study can show that chocolate scents and stronger performance traveled together; it can’t yet prove the scent caused the gain or trace the biology behind it. Hormones, brain signals, and other bodily measures that might confirm a mechanism simply weren’t recorded.

One leading guess ties back to appetite. Smelling a familiar food can trigger what scientists call a cephalic-phase response, the body’s head start on digestion that begins before any food arrives. A rich, bitter dark chocolate scent may cue that response and quiet hunger for a while, which could free a lifter from the nagging pull of an empty stomach. That fits earlier research linking lower pre-workout hunger to better lifting, though the authors treat it as a plausible story rather than settled fact.

Source : https://studyfinds.com/whiff-of-chocolate-before-workout-may-curb-hunger-lift-reps-new-study-shows/

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