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Recovery and Hydration

Recovery and Hydration. Remi Famodu: WVU Dietetic Intern. Nutrition and Performance. What determines sports performance? Genetics Training Nutrition Good nutrition helps you train longer and harder Delays fatigue Help your body recover faster after working out

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Recovery and Hydration

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  1. Recovery and Hydration Remi Famodu: WVU Dietetic Intern

  2. Nutrition and Performance • What determines sports performance? • Genetics • Training • Nutrition • Good nutrition helps you train longer and harder • Delays fatigue • Help your body recover faster after working out • Perform much better overall

  3. What Fuels Training and Performance? • Calories! • Carbohydrates • The primary source of fuel for aerobic activities, both short and long-term • Glycogen – storage form in muscle, liver, heart • Proteins • Essential amino acids • Helps repair and build muscle • Fats • Heart healthy fats vs. saturated fats

  4. Carbohydrates in Foods • Athletes are sometimes carbohydrate deprived • Low “carb” craze is NOT for active athletes • Confusion over weight management and restricting calorie intake and restricting “carbs” • Fruits and Vegetables • Eat the colors of the rainbow • Breads and Cereals • Go for whole grains as much as possible • Milk and yogurt • Choose low fat or fat free – not to save calories but to reduce saturated fat and cholesterol

  5. Importance of Good Nutrition • Pre-exercise eating and hydration are recommended to athletes so they take in what they need daily to keep muscles fueled and hydrated, optimize performance, and ensure adequate recovery. • Athletes rely on glycogen stores from muscle and liver and on fat stores to fuel energy during training. • Pre-exercise eating contributes to energy with continuous exercise > 1 hour • Helps athletes concentrate more • Can make the difference between winning and losing

  6. Pre-exercise meals • Carbohydrate dense • Improves endurance and is beneficial for those training after and extended period time without food (early morning practice or competition) • Make sure to eat breakfast! • Restores liver glycogen after the night fast • Can increase suboptimal muscle glycogen stores • Contains a little amount of protein

  7. Pre-exercise meal examples • Bagel with peanut butter • Medium banana, ½ cup blueberries and a piece of string cheese • Fig bar, 1 cup yogurt, ¼ cup of granola • Granola bar and fruit

  8. Tips for pre-exercise eating • Eat foods familiar to you • You do not know how a food will react in your stomach • Experiment with foods during training instead of competition • Foods to avoid: • High fiber cereals (bran) • Carbonated beverages, fruit juices and alcohol (it takes 1 hour for your body to get rid of 1 oz of alcohol) • Large amounts of caffeine • Broccoli or cauliflower (gas and bloating) • Fatty foods (i.e pepperoni, salami and hot dogs) • Fried foods • Dried fruits (i.e raisins and apricots)

  9. Post-exercise recovery • Eating after an exercise is just as or more important than eating before exercise • May need to: • Replenish liver and muscle glycogen • Replace water and electrolytes lost through sweating • Repair muscle damage • Build skeletal muscle proteins • Essential in helping the athlete recover quickly to get out there and do it again the next day • Eat to replete! Make this a priority.

  10. Timing • “Within 15” • Eat or drink something containing carbohydrates and protein within 15 minutes of completing exercise to replete muscle and liver glycogen stores • Research shows that this is when insulin is working at its best. • Glycogen building is enhanced and skeletal muscle is more sensitive to insulin’s action • We continue to burn calories after exercise; “Not eating, than depleting” • Not eating afterwards may acquire an additional day to recover

  11. Post-exercise meal composition • Recommend 1.0 g/kg body weight/ hour followed by the same amount at 2 hour intervals for 4 to 6 hours to maximize glycogen storage • Can be consumed solid or liquid forms • It is important to note, that recovery nutrition is in your pantry. Don’t need to buy products for proper recovery. • Should contain a 4:1 carbohydrate to protein ratio • Example: If you need 50 g CHO, then you will need 12.5 grams of PRO

  12. Carbohydrate Needs Calculation • NOTE: 1 pound = 2.2 kilograms • First, covert your weight in pounds to kilograms • # of pounds/2.2 kg = weight in kg • Ex. 120 lbs/2.2 kg = 50kg • Need 1 gram CHO for each kg of body weight • 50kg = 50g CHO

  13. Snack Ideas following exercise • Chocolate milk • Recovery Shake • Sports Drink (Only a sports drink) • Trail Mix • Sandwich (PB&J) • Bagel with PB • Yogurt with fruit • Lowfat cheese and crackers

  14. Hydration for Top Performance

  15. Importance of staying hydrated • Essential for: • Cardiovascular health • Body temperature regulation • Injury prevention (~75% of our muscles are made of water) • Recovery from activity! • A body that is not properly hydrated cannot perform to its maximum

  16. Problems with Dehydration • Increased heart rate (every liter of sweat loss ↑ HR by 8 beats/minute---heart must work harder) • Impaired ability to appropriately regulate body temperature • Early-onset fatigue (lightheadedness, tired, headaches) • Increased perceived effort of exertion • Decrease in sustained attention (↑ response time and ↓ task accuracy) • Increase chances of injury

  17. Reasons for dehydration • Beverages too concentrated in sugars (takes too long to empty into gut and make its way to muscles) • Superstitions or trying of new beverages • Beverage advertisements and packaging • Athletes who limit meals • The more dehydrated = less likely to drink (feeling of full when you do drink) • Drinking only when thirsty or mouth is dry(when you are thirsty you are already dehydrated!) • Accessibility! (if it isn’t around, the don’t think about it)

  18. How can you tell if you’re dehydrated

  19. Fluid Recommendation Before Exercise • ACSM recommends ~5 to 7mL/kg of fluids (via food and fluid) at least 4 hours before exercise • General rule: Drink 2 cups of fluid 2 hours before exercise to promote adequate hydration and allow time for excretion • What to drink? • Water! • Fluid with sodium may help encourage fluid consumption and retain body water

  20. Fluid Recommendation During Exercise • Energy production during exercise is inefficient • Generates heat and increases core body temperature • Sweat! (Can be 0 L to 2 L or more per hour) • Factors affecting sweating: • Intensity, duration, genetics, sex, fitness level, acclimation to environment, humidity, clothing or equipment • Goal is to drink enough to minimize dehyrdation without overdrinking! • Drinking during exercise is athlete specific (sweat loss calculation) • General rule: Drink 1 cup every 10-15 minutes • What to drink? • Training/event > 1 hour or very intense; gatorade or sports drink to replace electrolytes (sodium, chloride and potassium) and promote fluid intake

  21. Fluid Recommendation After Exercise • Goal is to replace fluid and electrolytes • This can be done by fluid or food intake (Gatorade, salty snacks or foods, soups, pretzels, jerky) • General Rule: Drink 2 cups for every pound lost during the duration of the exercise • Salty Sweater? • Muscle cramps, sweat stings eyes, salt on skin or clothes after exercise • General Rule: Consume sports drinks after exercise, eat salty snacks, add extra salt to foods, drink salty beverages

  22. What should athletes drink? • Cold Water! • 100% fruit juices • Sports drinks (Only during sport activities) • Milk • Coffee or Tea • Alcohol decreases performance! • Delayed rehydration, delayed muscle recovery, restless sleep, excess calories, overly active appetite • Carbonated beverages not before, during or after exercise

  23. Tips to hydrate • Keep a filled water bottle around you at ALL times • Drink early and often • If you’re drippin’, better be sippin’ • Flavor it with fruit for more appealing taste • Drink a glass with each meal

  24. Questions?

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