fueling training for peak performance: endurance athletes

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FUELING TRAINING FOR PEAK PERFORMANCE: ENDURANCE ATHLETES NUTRITIONAL NEEDS

PROVEN STRATEGIES

NEW STRATEGIES

ENERGY NEEDS OF ACTIVE INDIVIDUALS AND ATHLETES ▪ General Fitness Training (e.g., 30 - 40 min/d; 3 d/wk) ▪ Exercise energy expenditure generally 200 – 400 kcals/workout ▪ Energy needs can be met on normal diet (e.g., 1,800 – 2,400 kcals/day or about 25 35 kcals/kg/day for a 50 – 80 kg individual) ▪ Moderate Training (e.g., 2-3 hrs/d; 5-6 d/wk) ▪ Exercise energy expenditure generally 600 – 1,200 kcals/hour ▪ Caloric needs may approach 50 – 80 kcals/kg/day (2,500 – 8,000 kcals/day for a 50 – 100 kg athlete) ▪ Elite Athletes (e.g., 3-6 hrs/d; 5-6 d/wk) ▪ Energy expenditure in Tour de France reported as high as 12,000 kcals/day (150 200 kcals/kg/d for a 60 – 80 kg athlete) – ▪ Caloric needs for large athletes (i.e., 100 – 150 kg) may range between 6,000 – 12,000 kcals/day depending on the volume/intensity of training ▪ Often difficult for athletes to eat enough food in order to meet caloric needs

WHAT THOSE CALORIES LOOK LIKE 1300 CALORIES

2500 CALORIES

>4000 CALORIES

NUTRITIONAL GUIDELINES GENERAL FITNESS AND ACTIVE POPULATIONS • Diet focused on goals (maintenance, weight gain, weight loss) • Carbohydrate (45%-55% of calories) ▪ 3 – 5 g/kg/d

• Protein (10-15% of calories) ▪ 0.8 – 1.0 g/kg/d (younger) ▪ 1.0 – 1.2 g/kg/d (older)

• Fat (25-35% of calories)  0.5 – 1.5 g/kg/d

• Make Good Food Choices

• Meal timing can optimize training response

NORMAL HEALTHY MEAL PLAN 18000 CALORIES

1200 CALORIES

1500 kcals  8 – 10 g/kg/d – heavy training > 2000 kcals • Protein (15-20% of calories)  1.0 – 1.5 g/kg/d moderate training  1.5 - 2.0 g/kg/d during heavy training • Fat (25-30% of calories)  0.5 – 1.5 g/kg/d

• Meal Timing Important • Use of energy supplements helpful

NUTRITION STRATEGIES ENDURANCE ATHLETES

▪Nutritional Goals ▪ Provide CHO & PRO ▪ Maintain Hydration  Increase power and recovery from high intensity exercise ▪ Improve high intensity exercise performance ▪ Increase muscle mass

CARBOHYDRATES & EXERCISE

Intensity

Duration

Baseball Guidelines: Winter Spring Off Season

Baseball In Season

20% Protein Fat

60%

20%

Carbo

30% 55%

Preseason 25%

15%

Protein Fat

55%

Carbo

20%

Protein

Fat

Carbo

SAMPLE MEAL PLAN

MACRO NUTRIENT BREAKDOWN FOR ENDURANCE

THE ETHIOPIAN SUPER ATHLETE DIET

SAMPLE MARATHON EATING PLAN X2

CARBOHYDRATES BEFORE EXERCISE Pre-exercise  1-5 grams / kg of carbohydrate 1 to 4 hours before  More easily digestible and smaller amounts if within one hour from exercising  Avoid high glycemic index carbohydrates if within one hour from exercising. Why?

CARBOHYDRATES BEFORE EXERCISE

CARBOHYDRATES DURING EXERCISE  High glycemic index. Why?  30 minutes before fatigue

 30-60 grams every hour  e.g. 8 oz sport drink contains 14-24 grams Power output (intensity level) with and without carbohydrates during exercise

GELS AND ENERGY BARS

NUTRITION STRATEGIES ISSN REVIEW PAPER 2010 ▪ • Nutritional Strategies ▪ •

Moderate to High CHO and PRO diet

▪ •

Water/GES

▪ •

Post-Exercise PRO/EAA

▪ • Ergogenic Aids ▪ •

Creatine

▪ •

β-HMB

▪ •

β-alanine

▪ •

Sodium Bicarbonate

THE ISSN HAS RECENTLY ADOPTED A POSITION STAND ON PROTEIN THAT HIGHLIGHTS THE FOLLOWING POINTS ▪ Exercising individuals need approximately 1.4 to 2.0 grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight per day. ▪ Concerns that protein intake within this range is unhealthy are unfounded in healthy, exercising individuals. ▪ An attempt should be made to obtain protein requirements from whole foods, but supplemental protein is a safe and convenient method of ingesting high quality dietary protein. ▪ The timing of protein intake in the time period encompassing the exercise session has several benefits including improved recovery and greater gains in fat free mass. ▪ Protein residues such as branched chain amino acids have been shown to be beneficial for the exercising individual, including increasing the rates of protein synthesis, decreasing the rate of protein degradation, and possibly aiding in recovery from exercise. ▪ Exercising individuals need more dietary protein than their sedentary counterparts

PROTEIN AMINO ACIDS

Nonessential

Essential

Alanine

Histidine

Arginine

Isoleucine

Asparagine

Leucine

Aspartate

Lysine

Cysteine

Methionine

Glutamate

Phenylalanine

Glutamine

Threonine

Glycine

Tyrptophan

Proline

Valine

Serine Tyrosine

PROTEIN

NITROGEN BALANCE Positive Nitrogen Balance

Negative Nitrogen Balance

NOT ALL PROTEIN IS THE SAME ▪ ISSN review report states that: ▪ Proteins differ based on the source obtained, the AA profile of the Protein, and the method of isolating the protein ▪ These differences influence availability of the AA and the peptides that have reported biologic activity: lactalbumin, lactoglobulin, glyomacropeptide, immunoglobulins, lactoperoxidases, lactoferrin ▪ Rate of digestion and absorption ▪ Different types of casein and whey are digested at different rates in some research studies ▪ So make sure the protein is High Quality protein ▪ Skinless chicken, fish, egg white, skim milk

NUTRITIONAL GUIDELINES: STRATEGIC EATING AND REFUELING  Pre-exercise meals (4-6 h)  Pre-exercise snack (30-60 min)  40-50 g CHO, 10 g PRO

 Sports drinks during exercise (> 60 min)  6%-8% glucose-electrolyte solution  Sports gels/bars at half-time

 Post-exercise snack (within 30 min)  1 g/kg CHO, 0.5 g/kg PRO

 Post-exercise meal (within 2 hrs)  Carbohydrate loading (2-3 days prior to competition)  Taper training by 30%-50%  Ingest 200-300 extra grams of CHO

GLYCOGEN DEPLETION

glycogen depletion can occur over time if the diet is low in carbohydrates

NUTRITIONAL GUIDELINES: VITAMINS AND MINERALS ▪ No clear ergogenic value of vitamin supplementation for athletes who consume a normal, nutrient dense diet. ▪ Some vitamins may help athletes tolerate training to a greater degree by reducing oxidative damage (Vitamin E, C) and/or help to maintain a healthy immune system during heavy training (Vitamin C). ▪ Some athletes susceptible to mineral deficiencies in response to training and/or prolonged exercise. (sweat rate) ▪ Supplementation of minerals in deficient athletes has generally been found to improve exercise capacity. (Ca, Fe, B vitamins) ▪ Some potential benefits reported from iron, sodium phosphate, sodium chloride, and zinc supplementation

▪ Use of a low-dose daily multivitamin and/or a vitamin enriched post-workout carbohydrate/protein supplement is advisable

MINERALS Major (Macro) minerals Calcium Sodium Potassium Chloride Phosphorus Magnesium Sulfur

Trace (Micro) minerals Iron Iodine Fluoride Zinc Selenium Copper Cobalt Chromium Manganese Molybdenum Arsenic Nickel Vanadium

VITAMINS Fat soluble Water soluble

WATER ▪ Most important nutritional ergogenic aid ▪ Performance can be impaired when ≥ 2% of body weight is lost through sweat. ▪ Fluid loss of > 4% of body weight during exercise may lead to heat illness, heat exhaustion, heat stroke, and death. Think of EAH ▪ Athletes should ingest 0.5 to 2 L/h (e.g., 6-8 oz of cold water or a GES every 5 to 15-min) to maintain hydration

 Addition of 1 g/L of salt can help maintain hydration in hot & humid environments

SPORTS DRINKS Name

Energy (kcal)

CHO (g)

CHO (%)

Na (mg)

K (mg)

Other

Accelerade

80

21

6.2

190

All Sport

70

20

8.3

55

50 vitamins

47.5

10

8

50

55 Vitamins A, C and chromium

Extran Thristquencher

45

11

5

61

Hydrade

55

10

4

91

Gatorade Endurance

50

14

6

198

93 Chloride, calcium, magnesium

Gatorade

50

14

6

110

30 Cl, P

GU20

50

13

240

40 (Complex carbohydrates)

Powerade

70

17

Powerbar Endurance

70

17

Propel

10

3

65 5 g protein, Mg, vitamins C & E Ca, Cl, P, vitamins C, and five B

Cytomax

7

49.5 n/a 77 Glycerol, vitamin C

55

35 B vitamins

160

10 Mg and Cl Vitamin C, E, niacin, B6, B12,

0.4

35

40 pantothenic acid

WHICH ATHLETES ARE AT RISK FOR HYPONATREMIA • Athletes that drink too much before and during prolonged exercise in warm humid climates • Small, slow athletes who sweat a lot, excrete salty sweat and tend to drink more before and during sport events • A smaller body means it takes less fluid to dilute the ECF • Slow runners and longer events have more time and opportunities to drink

• Large sweat losses speed Na loss

• Athletes who drink too much prior to event

SOME CAUSES OF EAH • SAIDH syndrome • Sequestering of water in the gutresulting in post race dilution when water is absorbed. • NSAID over use-affects kidney function and decrease urine production. • High Na losses in sweat • Excessive drinking

TOO MUCH OF GOOD THING • Likely combination of excessive drinking and salt losses reduces plasma sodium concentration • Weight changes during longer events, races • Urine production decreases, sodium loss via sweat increases….setting state for EAH if too much fluid is ingested

DRINKING DO’S TO PREVENT EAH ▪ Start exercise hydrated ▪ Weigh yourself before and after workout

▪ Drink during exercise based on sweat rate ▪ Ingest sodium during exercise ▪ Follow personal drinking plan ▪ Drink with meals

DRINKING DON’TS TO PREVENT EAH ▪ Don’t rely on just water ▪ Don’t overdrink

▪ Don’t gain weight with exercise ▪ Don’t restrict salt

▪ Don’t use dehydration to lose weight ▪ Don’t delay drinking during exercise

NATURAL SODIUM

FOOD WATER

ON THE SLEEP OF OLDER ADULTS WITH INSOMNIA: A PILOT STUDY, J OF MEDICINAL FOOD 2010 ▪ Tart Cherry Juice ▪ tart cherries are a natural source of melatonin, a hormone that helps regulate the sleep ▪ Antioxidants reduce inflammation

▪ The results of this pilot study suggest that CherryPharm, a tart cherry juice blend, has modest beneficial effects on sleep in older adults with insomnia with effect sizes equal to or exceeding those observed in studies of valerian and in some, but not all, studies of melatonin, the two most studied natural products for insomnia. These effects, however, were considerably less than those for evidence-based treatments of insomnia: hypnotic agents and cognitive-behavioral therapies for insomnia. ▪

EXERCISE & SPORTS NUTRITION REVIEW Apparently Effective Muscle Building Supplements  Weight gain powders  • Creatine  • Protein/ EAA  • HMB

Performance Enhancement  Water and sports drinks  • Carbohydrate  • Creatine  • Sodium phosphate  • Sodium bicarbonate  • Caffeine  • β-alanine  • Nitrates (e.g., Beet Root Juice)

CREATINE APPARENTLY EFFECTIVE ▪ • Creatine is a naturally occurring nonessential amino acid discovered in 1832. ▪ • Creatine supplementation studies began in early 1900s with interest rekindled by Ingwall and Hultman in 1970s. ▪ • Athletes reported to be using creatine as an ergogenic aid since 1960's. ▪ • Potential therapeutic role investigated since 1970's. ▪ • Emphasis on ergogenic value in athletes since early 1990s as synthetic creatine became available. ▪ • Current research on potential medical uses ▪ In endurance athletes effective in oxidation metabolism enhancement

USE IN ATHLETICS