Tuesday, December 20, 2016

Nutrition and Pre/Post Run Meals



Nutrition and Pre/Post Run Meals 
 
The 3 key components for runners:
            1) Training
            2) Rest/recovery
            3) Nutrition and Hydration

Nutrition Tips #1:
            Hydration: before, during and after the run/race!!
            Fueling and electrolyte replacement
FOOD/NUTRITION:
            Goal --> optimal performance and minimize GI distress
                        Pre-race: 1 week prior the event!!
                                            carbs/hydration
                        During: carbs and rehydration for sustained fuel
                        Post-race: up to 36 hours post-event!!!
                        rehydration, glycogen/protein

Pre-race meal
To optimize glucose availability and glycogen stores

Guidelines:
            1) Carb rich meal/snack before bedtime
            2) Race day: carb rich/some protein
            3) Well tolerated

Carbohydrate source of FUEL/ENERGY!!
            Simple carb: sugar fast/short acting (better during the race)
            Complex carb: starch slow/longer acting (before/after the race)
Avoid high fiber and high fat!!
        High fat foods: make digestion slower and heavier
       High fiber foods: will attract water and promote bowel movements
       Caffeine: although ergogenic aid (enhances athletic performance), it is a diuretic (will induce urination/risk of dehydration) and can promote bowel movements

Examples:
1) Banana with peanut or almond butter
2) Toast/bagel with peanut or almond butter
3) Oatmeal c pieces of banana/berries
4) Yogurt (greek) with fruit

Post-race meal
  To replenish glycogen stores and facilitate muscle repair!!

Guidelines:
              Mostly carb/some protein
              Begin within 30 minutes after race
              Follow with a high carb meal within 2 hours
       Carbs to replenish depleted energy
       Protein to rebuild muscles
       Continue hydration!!!!

ALWAYS IMPORTANT: 

NEVER TRY SOMETHING DIFFERENT ON RACE DAY!!

FIND OUT WHAT WORKS FOR YOU!!!
 GET YOUR NUTRITION FROM FOOD... NOT SUPPLEMENTS!!!!
Don’t miss the next GoRun / Nutrition Tips!!



Wednesday, December 14, 2016

Hydration and Fueling




Hydration and Fueling
Hydration, besides proper nutrition, has a very important role in athletic performance. How much to drink? Plain water or sports drinks??
What about fueling? Sports drinks or sports gels or energy bars or food??

Everybody is different!! It’s personal and requires trial/error!!

Hydration: look at your urine!
                 Light-yellow: ok
                 Very clear: over-hydration 
                 Intense-yellow: dehydration
Hydration prior to exercise:

        1) always hydrate, not just on the day you are running
        2) drink ~16 oz water at bedtime the night before the long run/race
        3) drink ~16-24 oz fluid (water or sports drink) 2-3 hrs before the long run/race

               if no urine or if urine is dark before the race drink again!!! 

Hydration during exercise:

    1) aim for 1:1 fluid replacement to fluid loss ratio
              check your pre- and post-exercise body weight
              (the difference is fluid loss: it needs to be replaced!)
             *some authors suggest to replace fluids slightly more than fluid lost

             or may consider: 8-16 oz/hr
            (more for faster/heavier athletes and hot/humid conditions) * some authors             suggest to drink 4-8 oz every 15-20 minutes
           NEVER SKIP A WATER STATION!
       o drink water or rinse your mouth or pour it on your head!!
       o can alternate drinking water and sports drink at every station
    2) for long runs (more than 60 minutes) need hydration/fuel/lytes:
           sports drinks (source of hydration/energy/lytes) with:
       o ~110-175 mg of sodium/8 oz
                        Salt tablets are unnecessary!!!!
       o ~20-50 mg of potassium/8 oz
       o ~30-60 g rapidly absorbed carb/hr to reduce fatigue or have a sports                    gel (source of energy/lytes)
       o same guidelines than sports drinks
       o always take 1 gel with water (at least ~8 oz water)!!
                     NEVER ALONE!!
                     NEVER WITH SPORTS DRINK!! o take 1 gel every ~45-60                                        minutes
       o after the second half of the long run:
                     may take 1⁄4 or 1⁄2 gel every 20 minutes to avoid stomach issues

Hydration post exercise:
    1) water, carbs and lytes
          usual meals/snacks and water should be adequate
    2) or sports drinks if no access to food after the long run



ALWAYS IMPORTANT:
NEVER TRY SOMETHING DIFFERENT ON RACE DAY!!

PRACTICE DRINKING AND FUELING DURING TRAINING!!!

FIND OUT WHAT WORKS FOR YOU!!!

Don’t miss the next GoRun / Nutrition Tips!! 

           






BY: Maria “Lupita” Townsend, MS,RD,LDN,CSO,CNSC


Thursday, December 8, 2016

The Science of Recovery Which recovery techniques work best and why.

Figuring out whether a recovery aid really works is trickier than you'd think. After all, how do you measure the subtle difference between feeling "good" and "just a little off" the day after a big workout? Here's what scientists have come up with so far.
1. ANTIOXIDANTS

Hard running triggers a cascade of "reactive oxygen species" that cause oxidative damage to your cells. Antioxidants can neutralize some of this damage, which is why some studies have found that dosing up on vitamin C in the weeks before and after a marathon can boost immune function. A caveat: Reactive oxygen species also play a key role in triggering repairs and adaptation after exercise, and some studies have found that prolonged antioxidant use can delay muscle recovery and interfere with fitness gains. For this reason, it may be best to limit antioxidant use to a few weeks at a time, during periods of particularly heavy training or racing.
2. JOGGING
Let's clear this up to start--lactic acid doesn't cause muscle soreness. Cooling down after a workout will boost your mileage, but it won't "undamage" your muscles or protect them from lactate. A Norwegian study published in 2012 found that a 20-minute warm-up was more effective than a 20-minute cool-down for reducing next-day soreness. The message: When it comes to muscle damage, prevention is better than cure.

3. ICE BATH

Every few months, a new study proclaims that ice baths do or don't work. In 2012, researchers from the English Institute of Sport combined the results of 14 of the best studies to get a more complete picture. The measurements of muscle damage and strength recovery were inconsistent, but ice baths made athletes feel better. One explanation for the results is that everyone has different ice-bath recipes. The evidence suggests that contrast baths, alternating hot and cold every minute or two, aren't as effective as sustained cold baths. Shona Halson, the head of performance recovery at the Australian Institute of Sport, suggests 10 minutes at below 60 degrees Fahrenheit as a sufficiently long and cold (but not too painful) dose.
4. MASSAGE

If massage wasn't helpful, would you really want to know? Fortunately, the news is good. To get around the placebo problem, researchers at Ohio State University have been putting rabbits in a machine that administers "massage-like compressive loading." They find that the massage reduces swelling and accelerates the return of strength after strenuous bunny exercises--and this effect is greatest if the massage is administered soon after the exercise rather than waiting a few days. Other (human) studies using muscle biopsies have found that massage reduces inflammatory markers in the muscle, possibly in response to internal sensors that detect when cells are being physically pushed and prodded. Book your massage secure in the knowledge that it's a training aid, not a frivolous indulgence.

5. CRYOSAUNA

If ice water is good, then swirling nitrogen vapor at minus 200 degrees Fahrenheit must be even better. Er . . . right? The idea is that your blood vessels constrict in response to the cold, combating inflammation and muscle pain. From the few studies that have tested cryosaunas, it's clear that the blast of cold provokes a physiological response from your body. Whether this response is any better than an ice bath (or better than nothing, for that matter) remains to be seen.
6. COMPRESSION

Like ice baths, compression garments suffer from a profusion of conflicting studies searching for different effects. So far there's little evidence that wearing them while you run will make you faster, but the case for accelerated recovery is more encouraging. While no one has directly tested the effects of wearing compression socks during or after a Sunday long run, evidence from other sports suggests that compression really does reduce next-day soreness and accelerate strength recovery. The key: starting the compression as soon as possible after exercise. Get the socks on as soon as you get out of the shower, and keep them on for an hour or so.
OTHER RECOVERY AIDS

The list of products on the market is long, and many of them are plausible, even if they lack independent testing. Be open to new ideas, and experiment to find what works for you. But remember that no recovery aid yet invented is capable of substituting for the original post-workout miracle recovery technique: rest..