Cargando…

International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing

Position Statement: The position of the Society regarding nutrient timing and the intake of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats in reference to healthy, exercising individuals is summarized by the following eight points: 1.) Maximal endogenous glycogen stores are best promoted by following a high-glyc...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kerksick, Chad, Harvey, Travis, Stout, Jeff, Campbell, Bill, Wilborn, Colin, Kreider, Richard, Kalman, Doug, Ziegenfuss, Tim, Lopez, Hector, Landis, Jamie, Ivy, John L, Antonio, Jose
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2575187/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18834505
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1550-2783-5-17
_version_ 1782160301977763840
author Kerksick, Chad
Harvey, Travis
Stout, Jeff
Campbell, Bill
Wilborn, Colin
Kreider, Richard
Kalman, Doug
Ziegenfuss, Tim
Lopez, Hector
Landis, Jamie
Ivy, John L
Antonio, Jose
author_facet Kerksick, Chad
Harvey, Travis
Stout, Jeff
Campbell, Bill
Wilborn, Colin
Kreider, Richard
Kalman, Doug
Ziegenfuss, Tim
Lopez, Hector
Landis, Jamie
Ivy, John L
Antonio, Jose
author_sort Kerksick, Chad
collection PubMed
description Position Statement: The position of the Society regarding nutrient timing and the intake of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats in reference to healthy, exercising individuals is summarized by the following eight points: 1.) Maximal endogenous glycogen stores are best promoted by following a high-glycemic, high-carbohydrate (CHO) diet (600 – 1000 grams CHO or ~8 – 10 g CHO/kg/d), and ingestion of free amino acids and protein (PRO) alone or in combination with CHO before resistance exercise can maximally stimulate protein synthesis. 2.) During exercise, CHO should be consumed at a rate of 30 – 60 grams of CHO/hour in a 6 – 8% CHO solution (8 – 16 fluid ounces) every 10 – 15 minutes. Adding PRO to create a CHO:PRO ratio of 3 – 4:1 may increase endurance performance and maximally promotes glycogen re-synthesis during acute and subsequent bouts of endurance exercise. 3.) Ingesting CHO alone or in combination with PRO during resistance exercise increases muscle glycogen, offsets muscle damage, and facilitates greater training adaptations after either acute or prolonged periods of supplementation with resistance training. 4.) Post-exercise (within 30 minutes) consumption of CHO at high dosages (8 – 10 g CHO/kg/day) have been shown to stimulate muscle glycogen re-synthesis, while adding PRO (0.2 g – 0.5 g PRO/kg/day) to CHO at a ratio of 3 – 4:1 (CHO: PRO) may further enhance glycogen re-synthesis. 5.) Post-exercise ingestion (immediately to 3 h post) of amino acids, primarily essential amino acids, has been shown to stimulate robust increases in muscle protein synthesis, while the addition of CHO may stimulate even greater levels of protein synthesis. Additionally, pre-exercise consumption of a CHO + PRO supplement may result in peak levels of protein synthesis. 6.) During consistent, prolonged resistance training, post-exercise consumption of varying doses of CHO + PRO supplements in varying dosages have been shown to stimulate improvements in strength and body composition when compared to control or placebo conditions. 7.) The addition of creatine (Cr) (0.1 g Cr/kg/day) to a CHO + PRO supplement may facilitate even greater adaptations to resistance training. 8.) Nutrient timing incorporates the use of methodical planning and eating of whole foods, nutrients extracted from food, and other sources. The timing of the energy intake and the ratio of certain ingested macronutrients are likely the attributes which allow for enhanced recovery and tissue repair following high-volume exercise, augmented muscle protein synthesis, and improved mood states when compared with unplanned or traditional strategies of nutrient intake.
format Text
id pubmed-2575187
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2008
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-25751872008-10-30 International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing Kerksick, Chad Harvey, Travis Stout, Jeff Campbell, Bill Wilborn, Colin Kreider, Richard Kalman, Doug Ziegenfuss, Tim Lopez, Hector Landis, Jamie Ivy, John L Antonio, Jose J Int Soc Sports Nutr Review Position Statement: The position of the Society regarding nutrient timing and the intake of carbohydrates, proteins, and fats in reference to healthy, exercising individuals is summarized by the following eight points: 1.) Maximal endogenous glycogen stores are best promoted by following a high-glycemic, high-carbohydrate (CHO) diet (600 – 1000 grams CHO or ~8 – 10 g CHO/kg/d), and ingestion of free amino acids and protein (PRO) alone or in combination with CHO before resistance exercise can maximally stimulate protein synthesis. 2.) During exercise, CHO should be consumed at a rate of 30 – 60 grams of CHO/hour in a 6 – 8% CHO solution (8 – 16 fluid ounces) every 10 – 15 minutes. Adding PRO to create a CHO:PRO ratio of 3 – 4:1 may increase endurance performance and maximally promotes glycogen re-synthesis during acute and subsequent bouts of endurance exercise. 3.) Ingesting CHO alone or in combination with PRO during resistance exercise increases muscle glycogen, offsets muscle damage, and facilitates greater training adaptations after either acute or prolonged periods of supplementation with resistance training. 4.) Post-exercise (within 30 minutes) consumption of CHO at high dosages (8 – 10 g CHO/kg/day) have been shown to stimulate muscle glycogen re-synthesis, while adding PRO (0.2 g – 0.5 g PRO/kg/day) to CHO at a ratio of 3 – 4:1 (CHO: PRO) may further enhance glycogen re-synthesis. 5.) Post-exercise ingestion (immediately to 3 h post) of amino acids, primarily essential amino acids, has been shown to stimulate robust increases in muscle protein synthesis, while the addition of CHO may stimulate even greater levels of protein synthesis. Additionally, pre-exercise consumption of a CHO + PRO supplement may result in peak levels of protein synthesis. 6.) During consistent, prolonged resistance training, post-exercise consumption of varying doses of CHO + PRO supplements in varying dosages have been shown to stimulate improvements in strength and body composition when compared to control or placebo conditions. 7.) The addition of creatine (Cr) (0.1 g Cr/kg/day) to a CHO + PRO supplement may facilitate even greater adaptations to resistance training. 8.) Nutrient timing incorporates the use of methodical planning and eating of whole foods, nutrients extracted from food, and other sources. The timing of the energy intake and the ratio of certain ingested macronutrients are likely the attributes which allow for enhanced recovery and tissue repair following high-volume exercise, augmented muscle protein synthesis, and improved mood states when compared with unplanned or traditional strategies of nutrient intake. BioMed Central 2008-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC2575187/ /pubmed/18834505 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1550-2783-5-17 Text en Copyright © 2008 Kerksick et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Kerksick, Chad
Harvey, Travis
Stout, Jeff
Campbell, Bill
Wilborn, Colin
Kreider, Richard
Kalman, Doug
Ziegenfuss, Tim
Lopez, Hector
Landis, Jamie
Ivy, John L
Antonio, Jose
International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title_full International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title_fullStr International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title_full_unstemmed International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title_short International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: Nutrient timing
title_sort international society of sports nutrition position stand: nutrient timing
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2575187/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18834505
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1550-2783-5-17
work_keys_str_mv AT kerksickchad internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT harveytravis internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT stoutjeff internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT campbellbill internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT wilborncolin internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT kreiderrichard internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT kalmandoug internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT ziegenfusstim internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT lopezhector internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT landisjamie internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT ivyjohnl internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming
AT antoniojose internationalsocietyofsportsnutritionpositionstandnutrienttiming