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Nutrition and Exercise

Nutrition and Exercise. Carbohydrates. Lipids. Protein. Vitamins, minerals and water. Diet and exercise. Drugs in sport. You are what you eat. Food means health. Types of food. Carbohydrate, lipid, protein. Biologic fuel.

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Nutrition and Exercise

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  1. Nutrition and Exercise • Carbohydrates. • Lipids. • Protein. • Vitamins, minerals and water. • Diet and exercise. • Drugs in sport.

  2. You are what you eat

  3. Food means health

  4. Types of food • Carbohydrate, lipid, protein. • Biologic fuel. • macronutrients to maintain body structure and functional integrity.

  5. Carbohydrates • Mono-, oligo- and polysaccharides. • Differ by number of simple sugars linked within the molecule. • Basic unit is monosaccharide, with > 200 forms in nature.

  6. Monosaccharides • Glucose (dextrose or blood sugar), is produced through digestion of more complex carbohydrates. • Fructose (fruit sugar) is the sweetest simple sugar. • Galatose is not found in nature, it is combined in milk sugar.

  7. Oligosaccharides • Sucrose (cane sugar) is the most common dietary disaccharide. • Lactose (milk sugar) is composed of glucose and galatose in milk. • Maltose (malt sugar) does not form significant component of a normal person’s diet.

  8. Polysaccharides • Starch and fiber are common plant polysaccharides. • Starch - the storage form of carbohydrate in plants. • Fiber - nonstarch polysaccharide such as cellulose. • High water content in fiber - “bulk” to food residues in small intestine.

  9. Polysaccharides • Glycogen - storage carbohydrate to mamalian muscle and liver. • Converted to glucose when needed. • If depleted, glucose synthesis from other nutrients, principally protein. • Upper limit of glycogen storage is 15 gm/kg.

  10. Function of carbohydrates • Serve as fuel, particularly during exercise. • Spare protein break down. • “Primer” for lipid metabolism. • Essential for CNS functioning.

  11. Carbohydrate (CHO) deficiency • Dietary restriction of CHO rapidly depletes liver and muscle glycogen. • Adversely affects intense short-term and prolonged submaximal exercises.

  12. Lipids • Long hydrocarbon chains. • Simple, compound and derived lipids. • Triglycerides are the most plentiful lipids in the body. • A cluster of glycerol with 3 clusters of fatty acids.

  13. Lipids • Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids (FA). • Saturated FA contains no double bonds between carbon atoms. • Unsaturated FA contains at least one double bond between carbon atoms.

  14. Lipids • 62% of FA in butter are saturated. • Only 20% of FA in margarine are saturated. • Margarine also increases LDL cholesterol and decreases HDL cholesterol concentration.

  15. Compound lipids • Triglyceride in combination with other chemicals. • Phospholipids, glycolipids, lipoproteins. • Lipoproteins constitute the main form for lipid transport in the blood. • HDL, LDL and VLDL.

  16. Derived lipids • Derived from simple and compound lipids. • Cholesterol is a derived lipid. • Even on a cholesterol free diet, the body synthesizes 0.5 to 2 g of cholesterol per day. • Cholesterol is needed for plasma membranes, synthesis of vitamin D, some hormones and bile.

  17. Lipids • For better health, lipid intake should be < 30% of the total energy content of the diet. • Among the lipid intake, at least 70% should be in the form of unsaturated FA.

  18. Role of lipids • Largest energy pool of the body (75 times that of CHO). • Cushioning of organs. • Insulator for thermal fluctuation. • Carrier and transport medium for Vitamin A, D, E and K.

  19. Proteins • Greek word meaning “of prime importance”. • The body requires 20 amino acids (AA) for protein synthesis. • 8 AAs cannot be synthesized by the body, which are the essential AAs.

  20. Proteins • A daily intake of 0.83 g/kg body mass is recommended. • Infants should take 2 to 4 g/kg, and pregnant women should take 20 g/kg of body mass.

  21. AA supplement • AA supplement above the recommended intake does not increase muscle mass or improve muscular strength, power or endurance. • Could adversely load the liver and kidney.

  22. Nitrogen balance • If +ve N balance, N intake > excretion, protein will be retained and new tissues will be synthesized. • Exercise would lead to protein break down particularly when CHO is depleted.

  23. Vitamins • Organic substances needed by body in small amount. • No energy value. • At least 13 vitamins, and only vitamin D can be manufactured by the body. • Vitamin C is a strong antioxidant.

  24. Vitamins • “If little is good, more must be better”? • Vitamin supplement has not been shown to improve exercise performance for people with adequate nutritional intake. • Lipid-soluble vitamins (A,D,E,K) should not be consumed in excess.

  25. Minerals • Approximately 4% of the body’s mass is composed of minerals. • Major vs. trace minerals. • Provide structure (bones). • Function (muscle and nerve). • Regulate cellular metabolism (enzyme).

  26. Minerals • Ca and P constitute 2.5 % of body mass. • Fall in estrogen at menopause decreases calcitonin, which is needed for Ca absorption.

  27. Minerals • Mg is present in about 300 enzymes. • Iron is present in 80 % as its active compound haemoglobin. • Na+, K+ and Cl- are termed electrolytes because they exist in charged forms. • Electrolytes maintain electrical gradient across cell membrane.

  28. Water • Most remarkable nutrient. • Serves as the body’s transport and reactive medium. • Important for heat regulation. • Without water, death occurs within days.

  29. Water • About 2.5 L of water is needed each day for a sedentary person. • 15 mL of water is needed to remove 1 g of solute. • Hyponatremia is associated with excessive fluid intake and insufficient Na+.

  30. An optimal diet is a diet that contains all the nutrients needed for tissue maintenance, repair, and growth without excess energy intake.

  31. Nutrient requirement • Young adult females: 2100 kcal. • Young adult males: 2700 kcal. • CHO is most rapidly depleted. • After exhaustive exercise, at least 1 or 2 days rest with high CHO intake is needed to replenish the glycogen level.

  32. Exercise meal 1 • Fasting before exercise makes no physiological sense. • A meal containing 150-300 g CHO consumed 3-4 hours before exercise improves performance by maximising muscle and liver glycogen storage.

  33. Exercise meal 2 • CHO consumption during exercise benefits both intense and endurance types of work. • Too much CHO immediately before exercise is detrimental to performance. • Ideal rehydration solution contains CHO concentration between 5-8 %.

  34. Drugs in sport 1 • Belief of competitors are using drugs. • Overriding desire to win. • Pressure from authority or peers. • Deprived legitimate resources. • Ignorance.

  35. Drugs in sport 2 • The Olympic Movement Anti-Doping Code. • Prohibited substances: • stimulants, nacrotics, anabolic agents, diuretics, peptide hormones. • Prohibited methods: • blood doping, artificial O2 carriers, pharmacological or chemical/physical manipulation.

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