Vitamin Cooler's (by Revolution Nutrition) ability to decrease fatigue is rated as 1.8 out of 3. This rating means the evidence is mixed on the product's ability to deliver on this claim. While some of the evidence supports its use, other evidence does not. Using Vitamin Cooler to decrease fatigue may lead to positive results. This rating is different from the product's overall rating and is based on what peer reviewed journal articles conclude on its ability to perform this one claim. This page contains an indepth analysis on how this claim-rating was calculated.

Note: The ratings on this page only deal with Vitamin Cooler's ability to decrease fatigue. To view the product's overall rating, visit the product's main page: Vitamin Cooler.

Table of Contents

  1. Simple Report
  2. Detailed Report
  3. References

Simple Report

Detailed Report

The detailed report is an in-depth analysis on how Vitamin Cooler's rating for this particular claim was calculated.

Claim Effectiveness Ratings

Each supplement product is a blend of ingredients. The database uses peer reviewed journal articles to rate the ingredients. These ratings are also used to rate how well products perform overall as well as on individual claims.

The supplement ingredients listed in table below are identified as affecting Vitamin Cooler's ability to decrease fatigue. The rating next to the ingredient describes the ingredient's ability to decrease fatigue. These ratings are averaged together and provide the product's overall ability to deliver on the same claim.

Ingredients Decrease Fatigue Rating
Vitamin C 1 out of 3
Vitamin E 1 out of 3
Vitamin B1 (Thiamine) 2.5 out of 3
Choline Bitartrate 1 out of 3
Inositol Stabilized Arginine Silicate 3 out of 3
Betaine 1 out of 3
Phosphorus 1.5 out of 3
Sodium 2 out of 3
Branched Chain Amino Acids 3 out of 3
Tryptophan 2 out of 3
Product's Claim Effectiveness Rating 1.8 out of 3

Claim Research Ratings

The research rating describes how well an ingredient's ability to perform a certain claim (such as decrease fatigue) has been researched. This rating is based on the amount of studies contained in the database on a particular ingredient and claim. Ingredient research ratings are averaged together to from the product's research rating for this specific cliam.

This rating is important because we need to know if there is enough research to make a valid conclusion on a product's worthiness. Ratings above 80 are ideal. Anything below 60 means there is not enoguh research to make a valid conclusion one way or another on a product's ability to deliver on this particular claim.

Ingredients Decrease Fatigue Research Rating
Vitamin C
Vitamin E
Vitamin B1 (Thiamine)
Choline Bitartrate
Inositol Stabilized Arginine Silicate
Betaine
Phosphorus
Sodium
Branched Chain Amino Acids
Tryptophan
Product's Claim Research Rating

References

Title
Effects of Applephenon and ascorbic acid on physical fatigue
Effects of palm vitamin e supplementation on exercise-induced oxidative stress and endurance performance in the heat
The effects of endurance training and thiamine supplementation on anti-fatigue during exercise
Effects of thiamine supplementation on exercise-induced fatigue
Effect of choline supplementation on fatigue in trained cyclists
The benefits of inositol-stabilized arginine silicate as a workout ingredient
Effect of 15 days of betaine ingestion on concentric and eccentric force outputs during isokinetic exercise
Phosphate Loading and the Effects on VO2max in Trained Cyclists
The effects of acute phosphate supplementation in subjects of different aerobic fitness levels
Effect of ingested sodium bicarbonate on muscle force, fatigue, and recovery
Sodium bicarbonate can be used as an ergogenic aid in high-intensity, competitive cycle ergometry of 1 h duration
Branched-chain amino acids and arginine improve performance in two consecutive days of simulated handball games in male and female athletes: a randomized trial
Effect of L-tryptophan supplementation on exercise performance