Title: Dietary Recommendation for Athletes
1Dietary Recommendation for Athletes
- Dr. David L. Gee
- FCSN/PE 446
2Training Diet Recommendations High Carbohydrate
Diet
- For Power Athletes
- Traditional recommendation
- 55 of calories
- Why?
- primary source of energy
- effect of repeated high intensity workouts on
glycogen
3Training Diet Recommendations High Carbohydrate
Diet
- For Endurance Athletes
- Traditional recommendation
- 60 of calories
- Why?
- endurance training reduces glycogen
- repeated training effects
4ADA/ACSM Position PaperDietary Carbohydrates
- 6-10 gCHO/kg BW
- Upper end with high intensity
- Upper end with long duration
- Recommends against CHO guidelines
- 4000 Cal/day _at_ 50CHO for 70kg athlete
- 7.1 gCHO/kg
- 2000 Cal/day _at_ 60CHO for 60kg athlete
- 5 gCHO/kg
5Training Diet Recommendations High Carbohydrate
Diet
- Recovery Meal
- CHO ingested within 2hrs of workout is converted
to glycogen 50 more rapidly. - Rec up to 1.5 g CHO/kgBW of mixed CHO within 2
hours (hi glycemic index?) - Particularly important for multiple
workouts/events per day - Role for protein in recovery meal?
6Training Diet Recommendations High Carbohydrate
Diet Recovery Meal
- Example
- 50 kg x 1.5 gCHO/kg 75gCHO
- 5 servings of bread or fruit
- Whole/real foods preferred
- Cheapest, has other nutrients
- Sport Supplements
- Convenient
- Concentrated
- Expensive
7High CHO Energy Drinks
8Energy Bars 70 carbohydrate calories
9Sport Shakes
10Energy Gels
11Training Diet Recommendations Moderate Protein
Diet
- RDA 0.8 gP/kgBW
- For Power Athletes
- ACSM/ADA
- 1.6-1.7gP/kgBW
- maintenance of large muscle mass
- optimizes rate of protein synthesis (?)
- Is more protein a problem?
12Training Diet Recommendations Moderate Protein
Diet
- For Endurance Athletes
- ACSM/ADA
- 1.2-1.4gP/kgBW
- replaces proteins used as fuel during endurance
training (10-15 of energy)
13Training Diet Recommendations Moderate Protein
Diet
- Most athletes do NOT need to consume
supplementary amounts of protein - typical US diet 15 of calories
- 4000 Cal diet 150g Pro in the diet
- 90 kg Power athlete needing 1.6gP/kg needs
144g Pro
14Which athletes are at risk for inadequate protein
intake?
- Limited caloric intake
- low meat/dairy intake
- very low fat intake
- weight conscious athlete
- 2000 Calorie, 10 protein
- 200 PRO Cal 50g PRO provided
- 1.6 gPRO x 55 kg 88g PRO needed
15MetRx Protein Plus Powder
- INGREDIENTS METAMYOSYN (Unique Blend of Milk
Protein Concentrate, Calcium Caseinate, Sodium
Caseinate, Whey Protein Isolate, L-Glutamine,
Dried Egg Whites), Natural and Artificial
Flavors, Partially Hydrogenated Oil (soybean and
cottonseed oils), Aspartame, Sodium
Carboxymethylcellulose, Guar Gum, Xanthan Gum. - 40/container, 16 servings/container,
46gP/serving 2.50/serving, 75/month,
900/year - 8 oz sirloin steak, 5/lb, 56gP, 2.50
- 5 c NF milk, 2/gal, 40gP, 0.63
16Training Diet RecommendationsLow Fat Diet
- 55-60 CHO, 10-15 PRO
- Advantages of moderately low fat (compared to
very low fat) - High caloric density
- Wider variety of foods available
- May be more palatable
17Training Diet RecommendationsSummary
- Carbohydrates
- Moderate to high in carbohydrates
- 6-10g CHO/kg BW
- Protein
- Higher than RDA, moderately high
- Power athletes 1.6-1.7gP/kgBW
- Endurance athletes 1.2-1.4gP/kgBW
- Fat
- Balance of calories, relatively low fat
18Case Study Brian Competitive Stair Runner
- Works 7AM to 330PM
- Construction contractor in Boston suburbs
- Training Schedule
- 5X/week for 2 hours on stairs
- 3 hour RT commute to city
- Trains weekends by cycling/trail runs
- Diet
- Realizes he needs hi CHO diet
- Eats convenience foods
19Brians Diet and Training Schedule
- 630AM lg bowl cereal, banana, whole milk
- 7AM coffee w/creamsugar, doughnut
- 12noon spaghetti with butter, 1-2 slices bread
w/butter, 4 Oreo cookies, 2c whole milk - 4-530PM drives to Boston
- 530-730PM trains
- 730-9PM 16 oz sport drink while driving home
- 10PM mac cheese (frozen dinner), handful of
crackers, 2 c milk, 4 Oreos, or a fast-food
burger, fries, 2c milk
20Brians Diet Analysis
- 4000 Cal, 50 CHO, 15 PRO, 35 Fat
- Assume 160 lbs 73kg
- PRO needs 1.4gPRO/kg x 73 102gPRO
- PRO intake 4000 x 15 600 Cal PRO
- 150 g PRO, protein intake is OK
- Or 150g/73kg 2.1 gP/kgBW
- CHO intake 4000 x 50 2000 Cal CHO
- 500 g CHO
- 6.8 g CHO/kg
- CHO intake OK, but perhaps marginal
- Goal
- Increase CHO, decrease FAT intake
- Recognize need for convenience
21Case Study Weight Gain for a Professional
Basketball Player
- 25 yo CBA rookie
- 71 (2.2m)
- 215 lbs (98kg)
- BMI 20
- Goal weight 235 lbs
2224 hour diet recall
PRO 97g/98kg1.0gP/kg CHO 1011g/9810.3g/kg
23Diet analysis of 24-hr recall
24Revised food list
PRO 174g/98kg 1.8gP/kg CHO 782g/98kg
8.0gP/kg
25Revised diet analysis
26Pre-Event Meal
- Goals
- Top off glycogen stores
- Optimize hydration
- Empty upper GI tract
27Pre-Event Meal
- Meal Composition
- High in carbohydrates
- mixed complex and simple
- Reasonably low in fats and protein
- Low in dietary fiber
28Pre-Event Meal
- Composition (cont.)
- High in fluids
- Individualize
- Use familiar foods
29Pre-Event Meal
- Timing of meal
- Complete 2 hours before event
- Individualize
30Carbohydrates Just Prior to Event
- Purpose provide exogeneous CHO to avoid
hypoglycemia and delay glycogen depletion. - For endurance athletes only
- Absorption delayed
- Response highly individualized
- Caution
- May promote reactive hypoglycemia in sensitive
individuals
31Meals/CHO before/during/after events
- Pre-event/Pre-game meal
- 2-3 hours before event
- CHO immediately prior to event
- 5-15 minutes before event
- CHO during event
- Post-workout meal
- Within 2 hours of workout
32Carbohydrates During Event
- Sport drinks, energy bars, fruits, breads
- Metabolically useful for
- endurance athletes
- May spare muscle/liver glycogen
- May provide extra CHO for more power
- those prone to hypoglycemia
- Exogenous source of glucose for blood
- Dilute concentration (because it also promotes fluid absorption
33Types of Carbohydrate
- Fructose
- Absorbed more slowly than glucose
- Reduced insulin response
- Reduced chance of reactive hypoglycemia
- May produce more stable blood sugar if consumed
45 minutes prior to exercise - May cause osmotic diarrhea in susceptible
individuals in high dosages - Free fructose, high fructose corn syrup (50),
sucrose
34Types of Carbohydrate
- Glucose Polymers
- Short polymers of glucose
- Partial hydrolysis of starch
- Soluble, low osmolarity, rapid gastric emptying,
digestion, and absorption - Most, but not all studies, suggest that glucose
polymers may be superior to glucose, fructose,
and sucrose
35Types of Carbohydrate
- Solid vs Liquid Carbohydrates
- Most studies suggests little difference between
solid vs liquid carbohydrates - Those that show difference tend to suggest that
liquids are more rapidly absorbed - Ultra-endurance athletes may develop aversion to
liquid sweet carbohydrates
36Types of Carbohydrate
- Low Glycemic Index Food
- Slowly absorbed resulting in lower, but prolonged
elevation of blood glucose - Research findings vary when comparing hi-, mod-,
and low- GI foods and performance
37Types of Carbohydrate
- Individualize type of carbohydrate used
- Individual differences
- Sport differences
- Use before/during workouts
- Note outcomes
38Carbohydrate Loading
- Theory
- Glycogen depletion is a cause of fatigue in
endurance athletes. - Increasing glycogen stores above normal levels
will enhance performance in endurance athletes.
39Diet, muscle glycogen, and endurance
performance.Karlson Saltin. J. Appl. Physiol.
1971-31203-206.
- Subjects Trained distance runners
- Protocol normal vs high carb diet
- Performance test 30km run
- Outcomes
- Muscle glycogen after hi-carb diet was double
that than after normal diet - All runners finished 30km faster after hi-carb
diet by an average of 8 minutes - No benefit seen in first hour of run, but able to
maintain pace toward end of run.
40Carbohydrate Loading Protocol Classic Method
- Depletion Phase (3-4 days)
- Strenuous endurance training
- Very low carbohydrate diet
- Repletion Phase (3-4 days)
- Tapered training -- rest
- Very high carbohydrate diet
- 8-10g CHO/kg
41Carbohydrate Loading Protocol Classic Method
Drawbacks
- High level of fatigue during depletion phase
- May result in hypoglycemia and ketoacidosis
during depletion phase (nausea, fatigue,
dizziness, irritability) - Very unusual diet during depletion phase
- Unappetizing
- May cause GI distress
42Carbohydrate Loading Protocol Classic Method
Drawbacks
- May not result in substantially higher glycogen
levels than Modified Method - Effect of different dietary CHO plans and muscle
glycogen content (Sharman, 1981) - Protocol trained runners, 73 VO2max for 90, 40,
40, 20, 20, 0 minutes - Muscle glycogen content
- 50 CHO diet for 6 days 160 mmol/kg
- 50 CHO for 3 days, 70 CHO for 3 days 203
mmol/kg - 15 CHO for 3 days, 70 CHO for 3 days 207
mmol/kg
43Carbohydrate Loading Protocol Modified Method
- Mild Depletion Phase
- Normal training with tapering
- Moderate carbohydrate diet (4gCHO/kg BW)
- Repletion Phase
- Light training -- rest
- Very high CHO diet
- 8-10gCHO/kg BW
- 400-700gCHO/day
- 70-80 of total Calories
44Carbohydrate Loading
- Diet a mixture of complex and simple
carbohydrates to maximize liver and muscle
glycogen - Effect of Dietary CHO-type on Rate of Glycogen
Synthesis (Costill, 1981) - Protocol trained endurance athletes, 10 mile run
_at_ 80 VO2max five 1-minute sprints with 3
minute rests - Muscle glycogen content
- 24 hours
- High simple CHO diet 133 mmol/kg
- High complex CHO diet 138 mmol/kg
- 48 hours
- High simple CHO diet 145 mmol/kg
- High complex CHO diet 165 mmol/kg
45Carbohydrate Loading
- Concerns
- 2-3 lbs of weight gain (water)
- 3 grams of water for every extra gram of glycogen
stored - 300-400 grams of glycogen 900-1200 grams of
water - 1.2-1.6kg weight gain (2.5-3.5 pounds)
- stiffness
- hyper-hydration
- nausea and diarrhea with diet changes
- Useful ONLY FOR ENDURANCE ATHLETES! (events over
60 minutes)