| dc.identifier.citation | Lloret-Gil, J., Victoria-Montesinos, D., & Martínez-Noguera, F. J. (2026). Effects of Curcumin Supplementation on Exercise Recovery, Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, Muscle Damage, and Performance in Exercise and Sport Contexts: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 18(12), 1992. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu18121992 | es |
| dc.description.abstract | Background/Objectives: Curcumin has been proposed as a nutritional strategy to support
exercise recovery through antioxidant and anti-inflammatory actions. However, trials differ
in sport context, training status, supplementation timing, dose, formulation, and methodological
control. This systematic review evaluated its effects on recovery outcomes in
active individuals and athletes, with particular attention to the applicability of the evidence
to real-world sport settings. Methods: PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, SPORTDiscus,
and Cochrane Library/CENTRAL were searched from 2012 to June 2026. Randomized
double-blind placebo-controlled trials were eligible when they evaluated oral curcumin,
curcuminoids, Curcuma-derived preparations with a specified curcumin dose, or curcumin
combined only with bioavailability enhancers. Studies using artificial muscle-damage
protocols, clinical populations, non-randomized designs, or combined bioactive interventions
were excluded. Methodological quality was assessed using the Physiotherapy Evidence
Database (PEDro) scale, supplemented by a Cochrane Risk of Bias 2 (RoB 2) assessment
and a Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation
(GRADE) certainty-of-evidence evaluation. Owing to heterogeneity, findings were synthesized
narratively by outcome domain, supplementation timing, formulation type, exercise
context, and training status. Results: Fifteen trials were included. Favorable effects
were reported in 6/7 studies assessing oxidative stress, 4/6 assessing muscle damage, 3/8
assessing inflammation, 3/7 assessing subjective recovery, soreness, or fatigue, and 4/8
assessing physical or athletic performance. However, effects varied substantially according
to population, exercise context, biomarker selection, timing of assessment, and formulation
type. The certainty of evidence was low for oxidative stress and very low for muscle
damage, inflammation, subjective recovery/soreness/fatigue, and performance. Conclusions:
Curcumin supplementation may support selected aspects of exercise recovery, particularly
oxidative stress responses. However, these findings should be interpreted cautiously
because the evidence derives mostly from small trials with heterogeneous populations,
exercise protocols, supplementation regimens, formulations, biomarkers, and assessment
time points. Evidence for muscle damage, inflammation, subjective recovery,
fatigue, and performance remains inconsistent, and further well-controlled trials in
trained and high-performance athletes are needed before practical recommendations can
be established. | es |