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Article ID # 20041806
Summer Sports Nutrition Guide
by Joyce Dewon
Energy Times, June 18, 2004
If you're hooked on exercise you're probably just as hooked on using top-notch
equipment when you work out. Those who are serious about staying in shape buy
the best running shoes, carefully pick out the best bikes and tread on durable
treadmills. But do you pay just as much attention to your nutrition?
Scientists who have
studied exercise have found that what you eat before, during and after workouts
is crucial to maintaining your health, getting into shape and staying fit.
To achieve your best athletic performance without getting injured or sick
depends on optimum nutrition. When you carefully plan what to feed your exercised
body,
it rewards you by feeling and looking better.
Short 'n Sweet
If you thought long exercise sessions were the only ways to get decent exercise
benefits, take notice: small doses of exercise during the week can go a long
way. "
The important thing, apparently, is just do it," says Howard D. Sesso,
ScD, author of an American Heart Association study on exercise and heart
disease. In his study, exercisers demonstrated that several short sessions
of exercise
were as good for the body as a single long session (Circ 8/00; 102:975-80). "
Short sessions lasting 15 minutes long appear to be helpful,"Dr. Sesso
explains. Even walking about three miles per week, which is a moderate level
of exercise, lowers your risk of heart disease by 10%.
No Sweat?
Some people glorify in working up a sweat; others curse the dampness. But putting
in extra effort in even short bursts of activity pays off: experts have found
that intense exercise burns more calories than more relaxed sessions, more
effectively reduces your risk of cardiovascular disease and helps stabilize
blood sugar levels. In addition, it stimulates production of human growth
hormone, which offsets some of the effects of aging (Exp Biol Med 2004 Mar;
229(3):240-6).
But don't go crazy if you haven't worked out in a long time. The intensity
of the workout should match your physical fitness.
According to the American Heart Association, when people exercise at a comfortable
pace, their heart rate and level of exertion stay within a safe range, but
still high enough to benefit their health. Strenuous activities, for those
who can handle them, produce the most physiological bang for the jog. But brisk
walking within your own level of fitness still offers significant benefits.
Feeding Your Muscles
When you exercise, you work and develop your muscles, which are made primarily
out of protein. Despite this fact, many exercise experts have advocated high-carb
diets for athletes. But, as John Ivy, PhD, and Robert Portman, PhD, point
out in their
book The Performance Zone (Basic Health), "[While] there is no doubt that
aerobic athletes require more carbohydrate than strength athletes...we are
now discovering that the addition of protein to a carbohydrate supplement offers
significant benefits to aerobic athletes."
That is why researchers believe that consuming plenty of protein along with
carbohydrates offers the best fitness benefits. Protein helps fuel activity
more efficiently and aids in recovery after a session at the gym, allowing
your body to repair muscle damage and build up muscle fibers.
During exercise, you break down muscle tissue. It is during recovery, after
your exercise session ends, that muscles are rebuilt. At the same time, other
cellular processes take place that adapt the body to working out.
According to Ivy and Portman, timing your intake of nutrients after exercise
is crucial: "The ability of the muscle machinery to regenerate itself
decreases very rapidly after a workout, so that the nutrients consumed more
than 45 minutes after exercise will have far less impact in helping the muscles
regenerate than nutrients consumed earlier."
Stresses and Tears
Engaging in athletics can cause microscopic muscle tears. These tears can cause
a range of problems that, when you exercise excessively, can cause pain and
injury.
Inflammation is the body's response to cellular damage. The damaged area can
swell as the body sends white blood cells and other cells to repair the injured
area. Unfortunately, the swelling can further damage the muscle cells.
Since inflammation can take 24 hours or more to cause the collection of cells
in the injured area, it can be a day or two before the resulting muscle soreness
reaches its peak painfulness and then starts to subside.
Cortisol, a hormone produced when you exercise strenuously, which can result
in muscle fiber damage. Cortisol boosts protein breakdown, so it can be used
to fuel muscle movement. But the more protein breaks down, the more potential
exists for muscle fiber injury.
Free radicals are caustic molecules that are created when the mitochondria
(small structures in cells) create energy; these marauders can also cause microscopic
shredding of muscle strands. As you increase your use of energy during exercise,
you simultaneously increase the production of free radicals. This collection
of free radicals can outstrip the body's antioxidant defenses, leading to extensive
muscle damage and dampening of the immune system.
All of these cellular events can make you sore. They are also the reasons that
athletes who overdo it day after day are liable to come down with nagging colds
and a variety of infections.
Muscle Fuel
Your muscles use different substances for fuel depending on what you ask them
to do. Lift a heavy weight and muscles recruit two processes called the creatine
phosphate system and glycolysis to generate a large amount of quick energy.
These are known as anaerobic types of energy production.
But if you jog, swim, bike or perform any other aerobic activity, the cells
use oxygen in what is called cellular respiration to supply energy to working
muscles.
When you exercise aerobically for extended periods of time, the energy available
is generally limited by how much oxygen your body is capable of taking in and
supplying to the muscles, where it takes part in energy production. In athletic
circles, this upper limit is known as your VO2max.
The carbohydrates your body burns for energy during aerobic activity are taken
from blood sugar and carbohydrate reserves called glycogen. (The muscles store
glycogen, as does the liver.) During a workout session, your glycogen supply
is limited to what is stored with your muscles. But blood glucose can be boosted
by carbohydrate drinks, energy gels or bars.
Most people who work out have enough glycogen and blood sugar to fuel moderate
aerobic activity for about two hours. After that, the body turns mostly to
fat and protein stores to fuel exercise.
Fat Into the Fire
In contrast to the body's quickly diminishing supply of glycogen and blood
sugar, fat can last for hours and hours of exercise. According to Portman
and Ivy, a 200-pound man with 15% body fat has, theoretically, enough fat
energy to run from Washington DC down to Miami Beach-and still has enough
energy left over to jump into the ocean.
But using fat for energy is complicated; fat is stored in fat tissue and not
readily available to working muscles. Plus, to burn fat for energy, the body
needs carbohydrate-it cannot burn fat all by itself. What's more, the conversion
of fat into energy doesn't go as quickly as carb conversion.
Protein is also used for energy when carbs run low. But the more you use protein
for energy, the more you risk soreness as muscle fibers break down.
Prepare to Energize
To maximize your energy during exercise and minimize soreness, Portman and
Ivy recommend some simple nutritional steps:
• Drink 14 to 20 ounces of water or a sports drink with electrolytes about
a half hour before you work out. Consuming fluid helps stave off dehydration
longer, helps you sweat more (which cools your body) and moderates the rise
in body temperature that takes place during exercise. Portman and Ivy favor
sports drinks to help you retain fluid and maintain your mineral balance.
• Eat carbohydrates an hour before exercising, which boosts glycogen and increases
blood sugar and insulin. Portman and Ivy add that, alternatively, you can also
consume a protein/carbohydrate sports drink about half an hour before working
out. The protein helps protect muscle protein from being broken down.
• Drink small amounts of fluid frequently as you exercise to replace water
lost through sweating. While some experts recommend only drinking enough to
quench your thirst, most researchers agree that a sports drink with electrolytes
is best to ensure proper mineral balance in your body.
• Consume carbs and protein during exercise. Portman and Ivy note that soccer
players who consume sports drinks that contain electrolytes, carbohydrates
and a bit of protein can perform more effectively. Cyclists who go on bike
rides of three hours or more enjoy more endurance when they eat energy bars
or consume other sources of carb and protein. Portman and Ivy advocate drinks
that contain carbs and protein in a 4:1 ratio.
Limit Soreness
Taking protein and carbs while working out can limit muscle damage and curtail
soreness. Carbs apparently drop your cortisol levels, and thereby limit muscle
injuries linked to this hormone. While the mechanism that helps protein limit
muscle soreness is not completely understood, it is possible that taking
in protein while working out keeps the
body from shredding muscle tissue in search of fuel.
Supplements that contain antioxidants such as natural vitamin E and vitamin
C (Portman and Ivy think you should take these during exercise) may limit free
radical damage to muscle fibers.
Muscle Reconstruction Plan
If you want to help your exercise plan make you stronger, you should focus
your after-exercise sports nutrition plan on these steps:
• Help your muscles recover from damage during activity and stimulate the rebuilding
process
• Replace glycogen (carbohydrates) the muscles have used up during your workout
• Reinforce your immune system
• Replace water and minerals lost in sweat
Even after you stop exercising, your muscles are still breaking down, according
to Ivy and Portman. The key to putting the brakes on this breakdown and initiating
the rebuilding process is by consuming a combination of protein and carbohydrate
within 45 minutes after your workout is completed.
The protein part of the equation is vital: don't merely indulge in only carbs
after exercising. A recent study found that while carbs could help muscles
rebuild, adding protein can make a big difference in improving your fitness
(J App Phys 2/04).
This combination of nutrients stimulates the pancreas so that it releases insulin.
The release of insulin is the key, initial step that sets off a cascade of
physiological events that speeds muscle recovery. Although many people think
of insulin as an undesirable hormone-if you never exercise, too much insulin
may help drive your blood sugar down and cause other problems-for exercisers,
this hormone plays a crucial function in benefiting from exercise.
By eating carbohydrate and protein soon after working out and stimulating insulin,
according to Ivy and Portman, you help your body boost its synthesis of protein
by:
• Increasing the amount of amino acids (protein building blocks) that get into
the muscles-this can increase by up to 50%
• Increasing the production of protein synthesizing enzymes by up to two-thirds
• Slowing the breakdown of muscle proteins
Drinking for Exercise
The most obvious nutrient you lose during intensive exercise is water in your
perspiration. However, that perspiration also contains an array of minerals
known as electrolytes. So, for optimal performance and health, experts recommend
you replace both the water and its minerals.
Merely drinking water-instead of electrolyte-filled sports drinks-during prolonged
aerobic activity can be dangerous. It leaves you vulnerable to a condition
called hyponatremia, which can occur when your blood levels of sodium and other
electrolytes drop, but your blood volume stays steady or increases because
you drink lots of water.
According to Edmund Burke, PhD, in his book Optimal Muscle Performance and
Recovery (Avery), one out of four athletes who seek medical attention after
a long race are suffering hyponatremia.
"
Typically," he says, "conscientious athletes get in trouble because
they adhere too diligently to one recommendation: the need to drink lots of
fluids. They tend to ignore another recommendation: The need to keep electrolytes
up...for most endurance athletes the real problem is drinking too much water." Dr.
Burke warns that you can possibly suffer hyponatremia even if you don't drink
a lot of water.
Signs of hyponatremia can be similar to those of heat exhaustion. But, while
resting and cooling down can help alleviate heat exhaustion, that doesn't help
hyponatremia. "
To protect yourself against hyponatremia, start by paying attention to how
much you sweat," Dr. Burke says. If your sweat seems very salty, burns
your eyes or leaves an evident, white residue on your skin, you may be losing
a great deal of sodium and should be diligent about eating salty foods. "
You can also make sure you're getting enough sodium by drinking sports drinks
instead of plain water during long (exercise) events," Dr. Burke notes.
Exercise Matters
Of course, no matter what you decide to eat or drink while exercising, the
most important factor for your well-being is to get out to the gym, onto
the track, or just on to the sidewalk, and do something, even if you only
want to go out for a walk. No matter how old you are or what kind of shape
you're in, you'll benefit from exercise.
"
It's solid evidence that across-the-board declines occur when people stop exercising," says
Charles Emery, PhD, professor of psychology at Ohio State University (Health
Psychology 3/04).
Don't decline or remain supine. Let your fitness climb.
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