If you are eager to learn more about how to best fuel your
body for top performance, you might enjoy muscling through
three pounds and 557 pages of Sports Nutrition: A Practice
Manual for Professionals. The new fourth edition of this in-
depth resource was recently released by SCAN, the sports
nutrition practice group of the American Dietetic Association.
(It is available at www.eatright.org; click on Shop Online.)
Although this resource book is written for primarily sports
dietitians, strength coaches, athletic trainers and other
health professionals who influence an athlete's eating
practices, serious runners might also like to feast on this
hard-core (but well written and relatively easy to read) book
that will answer all sports nutrition questions from A to Z,
including alcohol, carbs, calories, fats, fluids, protein,
vegetarian diet, weight gain, zinc-plus more! To give you a
taste of the information in the book, here are a few sports
nutrition nuggets that might be of interest.
* The average 150-pound runner has only 1,000 to 2,000
calories of stored carbohydrates (glycogen), but over 80,000 to
120,000 calories of stored fat. Most of the fat is deposited in
adipose tissue under the skin, but a little bit is also stored
directly in the muscles and is an important source of fuel,
especially during long runs.
* Don't try to eat a fat-free diet! The recommended intake
for athletes is about 0.5 grams fat/lb body weight/day. This
equates to 60 to 80 grams per day of dietary fat for runners
who weigh 120 to 160 pounds. That's 15 to 20 teaspoons of
butter! Preferably, the fat comes from healthful sources: nuts,
peanut butter, olive and canola oil, and avocado.
* While some fat is good, excess calories of fat are
fattening. Your body easily stores excess dietary fat as body
fat. That's why you want to carefully carbo-load on pasta and
breads, not fat-load on Alfredo sauce, butter, cheese, chips.
* Your body stores carbohydrates in the muscles in the form
of glycogen (1,200 to 1,600 calories) and also in the liver
(300 to 400 cals); this feeds into the bloodstream (100 cals)
and fuels your brain. During hard training that depletes your
muscle glygogen, you enhance your body's ability to store even
more glycogen; this enhances your ability to run for longer
before "hitting the wall."
* Runners should eat at least 2 grams carb/lb. body weight
per day. That's a minimum of 240 gm carb (about 1,000 calories)
per day for a 120 lb woman and equates to 10 pieces of fruit or
5 cups of cooked pasta. Runners in hard training actually
should eat 4 to 5 gm carb per pound body weight. No Atkins diet
here!
* Adult runners require about 0.5 to 0.75 gram protein per
pound (1.2 to 1.7 g pro/kg). Scientific evidence suggests if
you eat more than 0.8 gm pro/lb (1.8 gm pro/kg), you'll burn
the excess protein for energy. In other words, eating a very
high protein diet does not result in greater muscle gain, even
with intense resistance training. To bulk up, eat more overall
calories so you'll have abundant energy to do the hard work
needed to build muscles.
* Because eating before exercise can enhance performance.
Reserach suggests you should target:
0.5 gram carb/lb body weight 1 hour pre-exercise
1.0 gram carb/lb 2 hours pre-exercise
1.5 gram carb/lb 3 hours pre-exercise
2.0 gram carb/lb 4 hours pre-exercise.
This means, if you weigh 150 pounds, you need about 75 grams
carbohydrates-about 300 calories-of carb one hour pre-run, and
1,200 calories four hours out. This tends to be far more than
most runners consume. Experiment to learn how much your body
can tolerate, and try to build up to this target if you
currently eat less than this.
* Consuming carbs during endurance runs can delay fatigue by
30 to 60 minutes. Target about 1 gram carb per minute of
running-equivalent to 240 calories of carbs per hour if you
weigh about 150 pounds. That's about 1 quart of Powerade per
hour.
* Consuming carbs as soon as tolerable after a hard run
enhances muscle glycogen replacement because- 1) the blood flow
to the muscles is faster immediately after exercise, so carbs
can get carried to the muscles faster; 2) the muscles are
better able to take up the carbs because of increased
sensitivity to insulin, the hormone that helps transport carbs
into muscles. Plan to have banana, fruit yogurt, fruit
smoothie, and/or fig bars readily available.
* Both liquid and solid carbs refuel the muscles equally
well, so take your choice: chocolate milk or a pasta dinner.
* While many runners believe "thinner is better," don't try to
get your body fat below 5% (men) or 12% (women). Each runner
has a fat percentage and body weight at which he or she
performs best. Hence, you should listen to your body, and take
note of how you feel and perform, as opposed to force your body
to achieve a self-selected number.
* Warning: Body fat measurements-even under research conditions-
can be plus or minus 3 to 4%. If you are told your body fat is
16%, it might be 13% or 19%. Just having a different person
measure your body fat can significantly alter the measurement.
Use body fat measurements only as a guide and give yourself a
body fat range.
* At rest, your body burns approximately 0.45 calorie per pound
per hour. If you weigh 150 pounds, you burn about-- 70 calories
per hour of bedrest, or about 1,700 calories during 24 hours of
doing nothing except staying alive.- about 375 calories per
hour of moderate exercise, such as brisk walking at a pace of
15 minutes per mile.- about 1,200 calories per hour of high
intensity exercise, such as running at a pace of 5.5 minutes
per mile. Clearly, the harder you exercise, the more you can
eat! But take heed: hard workouts followed by naps reduce your
daily calorie needs. Runners who turn into post-exercise couch
potatoes commonly reward themselves with too much food and fail
to attain their desired weight goals....
Sports dietitian Nancy Clark, MS, RD teaches runners and
other active people how to eat to support their hard training.
She has a private practice at Healthworks (617-383-6100), the
premier fitness center in Chestnut Hill MA. Her best selling
Sports Nutrition Guidebook ($23), Food Guide for Marathoners:
Tps for Everyday Champions ($20) and Cyclist's Food Guide ($20)
are available via www.nancyclarkrd.com or PO Box 650124,
Newton MA 02465.