The World of Sports Nutrition
By Eddy Sutio
Advancements in medicine and an increase in capitalism in
the world as well as other factors all contributed to the development of the
field of sports nutrition.
As scientists learned more and more about our bodies and the
optimum level of strength and physical fitness they can harbor, businessmen
jumped the gun and manufactured products and services that actually help
athletes meet these optimum levels. The media joined in the ruckus and
published materials leading to the promotion of both the scientific and the
commercial side of the field.
Sports nutrition has been changing through the years around
the world. It’s not just that the topics are different – the emphasis and
approach have also changed.
Peak Performance, a sports magazine carried an article on
dehydration in runners on October 1990, its maiden issue. This article compared
the benefits of plain water with those of dilute glucose solutions, which are more
isotonic and therefore absorbed more rapidly.
Today, go into almost any supermarket, convenience stores
and even school cafeterias and you’ll find a ready supply of sports drinks
aimed at maintaining hydration just like glucose solutions.
The difference is that by using soluble long-chain glucose
polymers instead of simple glucose, it’s now possible to create an isotonic
hydrating drink which also supplies significant amounts of carbohydrate to
working muscles. And, the good thing is, sports drinks also taste better.
More than 10 years ago, it was made public that muscle
damage brought about by free-radicals may be reduced by having supplements of
antioxidant vitamins A, C and E. Years after, antioxidant supplementation
became a norm in the world of sports nutrition.
Now, researchers are also beginning to understand that
muscle damage is a more complex subject.
It is difficult to assess free radical damage in athletes and it has
been found out that large amounts of antioxidant nutrients may actually cause
cellular damage and impair performance.
The “Carbo loading” technique has been widely used over the
years by athletes all over the world. A carbohydrate-rich diet is important in
maintaining muscle glycogen stores thus ensuring high endurance levels.
However, in the 1990’s it became clear that the ‘glycaemic
index’ and release rate of different carbohydrates had important influence on
when they should best be consumed in relation to physical activity.
The relationship of carbohydrates and proteins were also
discovered namely that carbohydrates promote protein-sparing in the body. It
was also discovered recently that consuming carbohydrates before and during
prolonged bouts of strenuous exercise can help protect the immune system.
One of the most exciting recent developments in sports
nutrition has been the rise of creatine supplementation. The use of creatine is
now very common. Creatine renews the muscles essential energy source, ATP or
adenosine triphosphate. Increased levels in muscles optimizes energy turnover
meaning you’ll more energy for high power exercise and faster recovery during
and after workouts. Creatine also increases the athlete’s maximum effort,
delays fatigue and therefore prolongs endurance.
New wisdom and therefore new products have definitely
enabled athletes to fuel themselves better, work harder, train longer and
recover more rapidly. However, as in any kind of innovation there will always
be downsides.
Nutritional supplements available to most athletes in the 80’s
were very straightforward. Some athletes took drugs but the boundaries between
nutritional supplements and drugs clear. Today, the race to find new formulas
to boost performance has resulted to the availability of sports nutrition
supplements which do not really occur naturally. The result is that the
distinction between a nutrient and a performance-enhancing substance has become
increasingly blurred.
Some of these supplements contain ingredients that can cause
athletes to violate the rules and regulations governing their sport because of
unintentional contamination by other, ‘exotic’, substances present in the
supplement manufacturing environment.
More developments will be created in the world of sports
nutrition and these will definitely spawn ethical questions.
“Nutrigenomics”—the relationship between genetics and nutrition—will be more
researched upon.
As scientists become more skilled at discovering the
processes of our genes, it will be possible that rather than adopting a general
approach for sports nutrition, athletes around the world will be genetically
tested to help them determine precise individual requirements for optimum
health.
The next years will predictably be more exciting for the
world of sports nutrition.
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