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Carbohydrates. Chapter 5. What are Dietary Carbohydrates?. Organic compounds containing Carbon Oxygen Hydrogen Formed naturally in nature Synthesized ~4 kcal/gram. Types of Carbohydrates. Simple CHO Monosaccharides Glucose (dextrose, grape sugar) Fructose (levulose, fruit sugar)
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Carbohydrates Chapter 5
What are Dietary Carbohydrates? • Organic compounds containing • Carbon • Oxygen • Hydrogen • Formed naturally in nature • Synthesized • ~4 kcal/gram
Types of Carbohydrates • Simple CHO • Monosaccharides • Glucose (dextrose, grape sugar) • Fructose (levulose, fruit sugar) • Galactose (milk sugar) • Disaccharide • Maltose (malt sugar, glucose & glucose) • Lactose (milk sugar, glucose & galactose) • Sucrose (cane or table sugar, glucose & fructose)
CHO Types • Complex CHO • 3 or more glucose molecules • Polysaccharide (3-9 molecules) • Plant starches • Animal starch (glycogen) • or glucose polymer (10 or more molecules) • Maltodextrin • polycose • Fiber
Concentration Units • Mole = gram molecular weight • A mole is the weight in grams of a particular substance, like glucose • Example • Glucose is C6H12O6 • Atomic weight of C is 12, H is 1, O is 16 • Multiply the atomic weight X the number of that element in the molecule and sum it up. - 1 mole glucose is 180 grams
Causes of Muscular Fatigue Related to CHO Use • Muscle Glycogen Depletion • Fatigue begins to occur at approx 30-40 mmole/kg • Short duration high intensity (<60 sec) not affected until glycogen drops below 20 mmole/kg
Causes of Fatigue Continued • Liver Glycogen Depletion • Normoglycemia: 60-100 mg/dl • Hyperglycemia: >140 mg/dl • Hypoglycemia: <45 mg/dl • Decreased levels of BCAA in blood • Reactive Hypoglycemia
Glycemic Index (GI) The GI reflects the rate of digestion and absorption of CHO Blood glucose area after test food GI = X 100 Blood glucose area after reference food
Glycemic Load • Glycemic index relative to the serving size • Some CHO have high GI but are consumed in small quantities per serving • GL = (GI x CHO/serving)/100 • Ratings of glycemic loads • High GL = >20 • Medium GL = 11-19 • Low GL = <11
Use Of GI In Sports Nutrition • Before Exercise: A low-GL CHO should be eaten, particularly before prolonged exercise, to promote sustained CHO availability • During Exercise: Moderate to High-GL CHO foods or drinks are most appropriate • After Exercise: High-GL CHO for glycogen resynthesis
Major Factors Influencing Skeletal Muscle CHO Metabolism During Exercise • Exercise Intensity • Exercise Duration • Training • Diet
Mixed Diet • Low CHO High CHO
How Much and What Kind of CHO? • Minimum of100 grams CHO/day necessary for nervous system • For hard training lasting at least 90 minutes per day • 8-10 g/kg of CHO • 2 g/kg PRO • Remainder as fat • Type of CHO varies with timing • High glycemic CHO get on board faster • Low glycemic CHO have sustained effect
Consumption 1-2 hours Before Exercise • Up to 3 g/kg of CHO • 5 mL/kg fluid (2 cups for 75 kg) • Low to moderate glycemic index CHO • Minimal fat and protein
Less Than 1 Hour Before Exercise • Individuals prone to reactive hypoglycemia should avoid CHO, especially high glycemic CHO • May increase glycogen use • 1-2 grams/kg low to moderate GI
5-10 min Before Exercise • Hypoglycemic response is attenuated • At >50% of VO2max the glycemic response is depressed • Epinephrine is increased which helps maintain blood glucose • 50-60 grams of glucose polymer in 40-50% solution (Gatorlode)
During Exercise • Maximal use of exogenous CHO is ~ 70 grams per hour • Feedings every 15-30 minutes • 5-10% solution of 15-20 grams every 15-20 min • 8 oz of Gatorade contains approx. 15 grams of CHO • Fructose may cause stomach upset • Always test feeding prior to competition
After Exercise • Glycogen resynthesis rate is about 5-7% per hour • 2 hour window following exercise for maximal resynthesis • 1 gram CHO/kg immediately after exercise and every 2 hours for 4-6 hours • High glycemic foods • Combination of CHO and protein is best in a 3:1 ration of CHO to protein.
Alcohol As An Energy Substrate • 7 kcal/gram • By-products of alcohol metabolism released in blood appear to be of little importance to exercising muscle • Alcohol consumed prior to exercise may contribute 5% of energy over 90 min of exercise • Alcohol requires more O2 for metabolism than CHO or fat
Alcohol may interfere with glucose metabolism • Reduced aerobic endurance at 80-85% of VO2max • May reduce rate of gluconeogenesis • Typically represents non-nutritive excess calories contributing to fat storage