Nutrition Truths for Endurance Athletes
Endurance Sports Nutrition - 2nd
Edition
by Suzanne Girard Eberle
You are responsible for experimenting in training (before
the actual event or race) to discover and build a repertoire of acceptable foods and
drinks, and any other supplements, that you will use to meet your fluid, energy, and
electrolyte needs during long-distance events and races. You must figure out the basics --
what and how much you need to eat and drink and when you need to eat and drink it.
Dont neglect to put your strategies to the test in various weather conditions at
your intended race pace or intensity.
The only way that drinking and eating on the move become
automatic on the day of the event or race is by practicing beforehand.
Aim to be consistent and stick with what you know.
When your favorite or old standby is no longer working,
however, you must be willing to try something new. If youre contemplating tackling
ultra-length challenges, you first need to establish smart drinking and refueling habits
in long-distance events and races.
Consider how your body processes foods during exercise.
Blood flow to the gastrointestinal tract falls as your pace
or intensity increases, making it harder to digest and absorb foods that you take in. In
addition, your ability to consume and absorb calories when running (because of significant
jostling of the stomach) is far less (by as much as 50 percent) than when cycling. Rely on
simple carbohydrates during high-intensity efforts or when you need a rapid energy boost.
Choose electrolyte replacement drinks, energy gels (take with water)and sport chews,
glucose tablets, and if tolerated, soda or juice. During longer efforts of moderate
intensity, add solid foods and high-calorie liquid drinks to boost your calorie intake and
your spirits.
Refuel frequently instead of eating a large quantity at any
one time, which diverts blood away from your working muscles.
In other words, spread your hourly energy needs over 15- to
20-minute increments. Dont try to cram it all down on the hour mark. The best sports
drinks, high-calorie liquid drinks, energy gels, and energy bars for you are the ones that
go down and stay down.
Hitting the wall means that you have essentially depleted
your muscle glycogen stores.
Your legs (and other major muscle groups) have gone on
strike, even though you may have been consuming adequate fluids and calories. Your
training, or lack thereof, improper pacing, and general fatigue can contribute to this
phenomenon. You will often be able to continue and finish, albeit not with the desired
performance.
Bonking, when the body completely shuts down because of a
severe drop in blood sugar, is a much more serious situation.
The glycogen stored in muscles and the liver is essentially
gone. Muscles and, more important, the brain are not receiving sufficient fuel. If left
untreated, you may become increasingly irritable, confused, and disoriented. You could
find yourself sitting or lying down and could possibly lapse into a coma. Stop whatever
activity you were engaged in and boost your blood sugar by consuming readily absorbable
carbohydrates, such as sports drinks, energy gels, soda, fruit juice, or glucose tablets,
if available. Seek or ask for medical attention if necessary.
The best way to avoid bonking is to create a calorie
buffer.
Liquid calories in the form of electrolyte replacement
drinks and high-energy liquid products are favored because they tend to be well tolerated
and require less effort to get down than solid foods do. Large male endurance athletes
often have to consciously work to consume enough calories (for example, as much as 500
calories per hour of prolonged cycling as compared to 300 calories per hour for smaller
female athletes) to stay in energy balance.
Athletes who struggle with sensitive stomachs and other
gastrointestinal problems are advised to learn beforehand what sports drink will be served
during races and organized events. They can then train with that product or, if they will
have access to water, carry their own acceptable powdered sports drink in pre-measured
baggies and reconstitute it along the way.
The less fit you are, the fewer shortcuts you can take.
Knowing what you can survive on and still perform well with
comes with experience. If you are less fit or less efficient (a novice rider or trail
runner, for example), you need to drink and eat on a regular schedule. Set your watch or
bike computer and train yourself to drink every 15 to 20 minutes and refuel every 30 to 60
minutes to keep pace with the energy that youre expending.
From Endurance Sports Nutrition - 2nd Edition by
Suzanne Girard Eberle.
Copyright © 2007 by Human Kinetics Publishers, Inc.
Excerpted by permission of Human Kinetics, Champaign, IL. Available to order from Human
Kinetics Canada at www.humankinetics.com or by
calling 1-800-465-7301.
Source: http://www.runnersweb.com/
|