Protein-Added Sports Drinks
Don't
Boost Performance During Exercise
Adding protein to a sports drink won't make you race
faster, suggests findings from researchers at McMaster University.
"Sports drinks improve performance during prolonged
exercise because of two key ingredients: carbohydrate, which provides fuel for working
muscles, and sodium, which helps to maintain fluid balance," says Martin Gibala, an
associate professor of kinesiology at McMaster.
"Research also supports the practice of consuming
protein after exercise to promote muscle recovery. However, the alleged benefit of
consuming protein during exercise is controversial."
The study, which is published in the August edition of
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, found that adding protein to a
carbohydrate-electrolyte sports drink did not improve cycling time trial performance
compared to the sports drink alone.
The research was conducted on 10 trained cyclists who
performed a simulated 80 km bicycle race on three occasions. During exercise, the subjects
were given a sports drink, a sports drink supplemented with protein, or a placebo drink
that provided no energy.
The drinks were similarly flavored and neither the subjects
nor the researchers knew what drink was consumed during a given test. The study found that
the sports drink improved performance compared to the placebo drink -- confirming prior
research -- but there was no additional benefit of protein supplementation.
"Previous studies that suggested protein was
beneficial used 'ride to exhaustion' tests that do not resemble normal athletic
competition. In addition, the subjects in those studies received less than the optimal
recommended amount of carbohydrate," says Gibala. "Our study shows that protein
confers no performance benefit during 'real life' exercise when athletes consume
sufficient amounts of a sports drink."
The study, which was funded by Gatorade, comes at a time
when the sports drink industry is under pressure to create new products by adding
ingredients that might further enhance performance.
Some companies have heavily marketed protein-laced sports
drinks as the next magic bullet, but Gibala's research disputes such claims.
"Eating a little protein after exercise is important
to help repair damaged muscles and promote training adaptations," says Gibala,
"but no compelling evidence suggests that endurance athletes need protein during
exercise."
Copyright 2006 Business Wire, Inc.
Business Wire August 11, 2006, McMaster
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