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Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?

Web-based 24-h dietary recalls and questionnaires were obtained from 553 Dutch well-trained athletes. The total energy and macronutrient intake was compared between discipline-categories (endurance, team, and strength) within gender, and dietary inadequacy, i.e., too low or high intakes, according t...

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Autores principales: Wardenaar, Floris, Brinkmans, Naomi, Ceelen, Ingrid, Van Rooij, Bo, Mensink, Marco, Witkamp, Renger, De Vries, Jeanne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5331550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28208581
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu9020119
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author Wardenaar, Floris
Brinkmans, Naomi
Ceelen, Ingrid
Van Rooij, Bo
Mensink, Marco
Witkamp, Renger
De Vries, Jeanne
author_facet Wardenaar, Floris
Brinkmans, Naomi
Ceelen, Ingrid
Van Rooij, Bo
Mensink, Marco
Witkamp, Renger
De Vries, Jeanne
author_sort Wardenaar, Floris
collection PubMed
description Web-based 24-h dietary recalls and questionnaires were obtained from 553 Dutch well-trained athletes. The total energy and macronutrient intake was compared between discipline-categories (endurance, team, and strength) within gender, and dietary inadequacy, i.e., too low or high intakes, according to selected recommendations and guidelines, was evaluated by applying a probability approach. On average, 2.83 days per person were reported with a mean energy intake of 2566–2985 kcal and 1997–2457 kcal per day, for men and women, respectively. Between disciplines, small differences in the mean intake of energy and macronutrients were seen for both men and women. Overall, 80% of the athletes met the suggested lower-limit sport nutrition recommendation of 1.2 g·kg(−1) of protein per day. The carbohydrate intake of 50%–80% of athletes was between 3 and 5 g·kg(−1) bodyweight, irrespective of the category of their discipline. This can be considered as low to moderate, in view of their daily total exercise load (athletes reported on average ~100 min per day). In conclusion, only small differences in the mean energy and macronutrient intake between elite endurance, strength, and team sport athletes, were found. The majority of the athletes were able to meet the generally accepted protein recommendation for athletes, of 1.2 g·kg(−1). However, for most athletes, the carbohydrate intake was lower than generally recommended in the existing consensus guidelines on sport nutrition. This suggests that athletes could either optimize their carbohydrate intake, or that average carbohydrate requirements merit a re-evaluation.
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spelling pubmed-53315502017-03-13 Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines? Wardenaar, Floris Brinkmans, Naomi Ceelen, Ingrid Van Rooij, Bo Mensink, Marco Witkamp, Renger De Vries, Jeanne Nutrients Article Web-based 24-h dietary recalls and questionnaires were obtained from 553 Dutch well-trained athletes. The total energy and macronutrient intake was compared between discipline-categories (endurance, team, and strength) within gender, and dietary inadequacy, i.e., too low or high intakes, according to selected recommendations and guidelines, was evaluated by applying a probability approach. On average, 2.83 days per person were reported with a mean energy intake of 2566–2985 kcal and 1997–2457 kcal per day, for men and women, respectively. Between disciplines, small differences in the mean intake of energy and macronutrients were seen for both men and women. Overall, 80% of the athletes met the suggested lower-limit sport nutrition recommendation of 1.2 g·kg(−1) of protein per day. The carbohydrate intake of 50%–80% of athletes was between 3 and 5 g·kg(−1) bodyweight, irrespective of the category of their discipline. This can be considered as low to moderate, in view of their daily total exercise load (athletes reported on average ~100 min per day). In conclusion, only small differences in the mean energy and macronutrient intake between elite endurance, strength, and team sport athletes, were found. The majority of the athletes were able to meet the generally accepted protein recommendation for athletes, of 1.2 g·kg(−1). However, for most athletes, the carbohydrate intake was lower than generally recommended in the existing consensus guidelines on sport nutrition. This suggests that athletes could either optimize their carbohydrate intake, or that average carbohydrate requirements merit a re-evaluation. MDPI 2017-02-10 /pmc/articles/PMC5331550/ /pubmed/28208581 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu9020119 Text en © 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Wardenaar, Floris
Brinkmans, Naomi
Ceelen, Ingrid
Van Rooij, Bo
Mensink, Marco
Witkamp, Renger
De Vries, Jeanne
Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title_full Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title_fullStr Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title_full_unstemmed Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title_short Macronutrient Intakes in 553 Dutch Elite and Sub-Elite Endurance, Team, and Strength Athletes: Does Intake Differ between Sport Disciplines?
title_sort macronutrient intakes in 553 dutch elite and sub-elite endurance, team, and strength athletes: does intake differ between sport disciplines?
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5331550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28208581
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu9020119
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