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5.4: Carbohydrates and the Athlete

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    56835
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    In terms of energy sources, athletic events can be roughly divided into two groups. Strength-and-power athletes (e.g., weight lifters, gymnasts, sprinters, shot putters) burn glucose to fuel their event, whereas fat is the main fuel for endurance events (e.g., long-distance bicyclists, runners, and swimmers).

    Because strength-and-power events are short, normal stores of muscle glycogen provide ample glucose as fuel. So, strength-and-power athletes can perform optimally on a normal diet.

    Endurance events require a lot more fuel, and must ultimately depend to a large extent on stored fat. Even the thinnest of athletes has ample body fat to fuel an endurance event. But although fat is the major fuel in endurance events, carbohydrate is also used. In fact, depletion of muscle glycogen causes muscle fatigue and hinders performance. So, despite the fact that fat’s the main fuel, the availability of carbohydrates is what limits endurance.

    In preparing for competition, endurance athletes often use a technique called carbohydrate-loading to temporarily increase the amount of glycogen in their muscles. About a week before competition, the athlete trains hard, and then tapers off, resting on the day before the event. For 3 days before the event, the athlete eats a high-carbohydrate diet. This regimen temporarily raises muscle glycogen to higher-than-normal levels in time for the event.

    Endurance athletes are also helped by drinking carbohydrate-containing drinks during competition if their event exceeds 90 minutes. Consuming drinks containing about 5 to 8% carbohydrate (glucose, sucrose, or glucose polymer) beginning about 30 minutes before fatigue sets in, works best. Most commercial sports drinks contain this amount of carbohydrate (as do many fruit juices diluted with equal amounts of water).


    This page titled 5.4: Carbohydrates and the Athlete is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Judi S. Morrill via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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