Seven Myths of Endurance Sports Nutrition
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The average cyclist knows a lot more about sports nutrition than the
average athlete. Even so, cyclists are exposed to a lot of inaccurate
sports nutrition information and consequently maintain some unfortunate
practices. Some of these myths are remnants of past beliefs that have
been overturned by more recent science. Other myths are promoted by
companies that market sports nutrition products to endurance athletes.
Here are seven such myths and the realities that they obscure.
Myth
#1: Only carbohydrate can give me energy while riding.
After
90 minutes of fairly high-intensity exercise, protein contributes as
much as 15 percent of the muscles’ energy supply. In the
absence of additional protein consumption, this energy comes from the
breakdown or “cannibalization” of muscle proteins.
The increased breakdown of muscle protein during exercise causes muscle
damage and soreness and slows recovery. Consuming protein in a sports
drink or energy gel during exercise provides an alternative protein
source and thereby reduces the breakdown of muscle protein, enhancing
performance in the late stages of long workouts and races and
accelerating subsequent recovery.
Myth #2:
Sports drinks are not enough.
It is
common for cyclists, especially during long rides and races, to consume
carbohydrate gels and/or energy bars in addition to a sports drink. The
temptation is to really pack in the carbs, knowing that it’s
impossible to consume enough to offset depletion. But the average
cyclist cannot absorb more than 60 to 80 grams of carbohydrate per
hour. You can easily achieve this limit by using a sports drink alone.
When sports drinks are combined with gels or bars, the extra carbs get
backed up in the stomach and intestine and cramps, bloating, and nausea
can result.
Furthermore, a well-formulated sports
drink is a 6 to 8 percent carbohydrate solution and is absorbed into
the bloodstream faster than anything more concentrated. When you mix
such a drink with gels or bars, you greatly increase the carbohydrate
concentration of your stomach contents and thereby slow the delivery of
this vital fuel to your working muscles. Sports drinks are enough.
Myth
#3: I should eat and drink for sustained energy while riding.
Most cyclists are aware that certain carbohydrates
are absorbed more slowly than others, and therefore provide energy for
a longer period of time. Many cyclists believe that such long-lasting
carbohydrates must be better for endurance than fast-acting sugars, and
manufacturers of ergogenic aids often promote this myth. The reality is
that, because it is impossible to absorb any kind of carbohydrate as
fast as your body burns it while cycling, you need to take in energy
fuels that get delivered to your muscles quickly, not slowly.
A
perfect example is galactose, which is touted by one sports drink maker
as a “revolutionary” carbohydrate to aid in
athletic performance. Galactose is a sugar derived from lactose that is
found in milk. The drink manufacturer shows data in their advertising
suggesting that blood glucose levels stay elevated longer when
galactose is consumed as the main carbohydrate in a sports drink.
The
implication is that elevated glucose levels lead to better endurance
performance, but precisely the opposite is true. Galactose is
associated with high levels of blood glucose because it is metabolized
slowly – too slowly to effectively slow glycogen depletion,
which is what a sports drink is supposed to do. One clinical study
showed that the metabolism rate of orally ingested galactose is about
50% slower than that of a comparable amount of glucose during 120
minutes of exercise.
Myth #4: Protein is
for weightlifters.
Because cyclists
routinely damage and destroy muscle proteins in workouts and races,
their protein intake level needs to be as high as strength and power
athletes’. It is especially important to consume protein
immediately following workouts in order to maximize muscle protein
rebuilding. The muscles are able to build proteins two to three times
faster in the first hour after a workout than they can at any other
time.
As a general rule, within the first two hours
after a workout, you should try to consume between 10 and 20 percent of
your daily protein intake. The lesser amount will suffice after a
lighter workout, whereas you’ll need the greater amount after
a hard or long workout. In addition, consume about 4 grams of
carbohydrate for each gram of protein. The carbohydrate is needed for
glycogen replenishment and it also stimulates a stronger insulin
response, which results in faster delivery of protein to the muscles.
Research
has shown that consuming carbohydrate and protein together within an
hour of completing exercise results in faster muscle glycogen
replenishment and faster muscle protein rebuilding than when
carbohydrate is taken alone, or when both are taken more than an hour
after exercise. In one study, a carbohydrate-protein recovery drink
decreased post-exercise muscle damage, increased post-exercise muscle
glycogen synthesis, and extended next-workout endurance significantly
more than a sports drink containing carbohydrate and no protein.
Myth
#5: All sports drinks are the same.
While
most sports drinks are similar, the differences are crucial. You will
be well served to choose your sports drink carefully rather than using
whatever’s cheapest, most available, or well hyped. For
example, as mentioned, a sports drink should contain 6 to 8 percent
carbohydrate; but some sports drinks contain as little as 2 percent.
Fructose should not be the primary carbohydrate in a sports drink,
because too much fructose can cause gastrointestinal distress. Yet it
is indeed the main sugar in some sports drinks.
A
sports drink should contain antioxidant vitamins C and E to reduce the
amount of free radical damage to muscle tissues that occurs during
exercise, yet many sports drinks do not have them.
A
sports drink should contain three electrolyte minerals –
sodium, potassium, and magnesium – but several sports drinks
do not contain the last of these. And finally, there’s
growing evidence that protein (in the right amount) should be
considered an essential ingredient in sports drinks, as it has been
proven to accelerate the delivery of carbohydrate to working muscles
and thereby spare more muscle glycogen and prolong endurance. The great
majority of sports drinks contain no protein.
Myth
#6: Rest, not nutrition, is the key to muscle recovery.
Rest
is essential for muscle recovery, but it’s virtually useless
without proper nutrition. After workouts, the body is dehydrated,
glycogen depleted, and in a state of protein deficit. The sooner after
each workout you take measures to rehydrate, replenish muscle glycogen
stores, and rebuild muscle proteins, the faster you will recover and
the better you will perform in your next workout. This is because the
body is primed to sponge up the nutrients it needs for recovery in the
first hour following exercise. So a cyclist who takes in the right
amount of water, electrolytes, carbohydrate and protein immediately
after training will recover much faster and more completely than a
cyclist who takes in the same nutrients in the same amounts a couple of
hours later.
The fastest and most convenient way to
satisfy your body’s nutritional needs after exercise is to
use a sports drink formulated especially for recovery. Such a drink
should contain roughly 4 grams of carbohydrate per ounce (about twice
the concentration of a regular sports drink) and 1 gram of protein for
every 4 grams of carbohydrate.
Myth #7: If
it’s good for me at rest, it’s good for me during
exercise.
In a sports drink, any
ingredient besides water, electrolytes, carbohydrate, protein, and
antioxidant vitamins can provide no relevant benefits and will be more
likely to do harm by slowing digestion.
“Marketing
ingredients” are ingredients that are boasted about on sports
drinks labels because they have a reputation for healthful effects, but
which actually have no effect on performance but are included in
amounts too small to have any physiological effect. Ribose, creatine,
ginseng, Co-Q10, and carnitine are just some of the ingredients added
to drinks in such small amounts that really have no physiological
effects. For example, one sports drink contains about 2 mg of Co-Q10, a
coenzyme that has never been shown to improve athletic performance, and
even if you take it for health reasons (it’s an antioxidant),
it needs to be consumed in amounts ranging from 30 to 100 mg.
Thanks to Edmund Burke, Ph.D. www.optimalmusclerecovery.com