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Post Exercise Recovery Nutrition is one of the topics Brett Singer addresses with high school, college, and professional sports in Houston as part of the Ironman Sports Medicine team.
Cliff Bar and Gatorade
Gatorade and a banana
Applesauce and Gatorade
Gummy bears or Fruit snack
Choose any two of them and that should get you to the right amount.
Brett uses the USOC recovery chart
Glycemic Index Chart by National Library of Medicine
Milk is more effective at rehydration than just water.
If you are eating then you probably do not need the recovery drink
Situations dictate different needs.
The 10-year-old kid will likely need less than an adult
Sodium and Chloride are the most important components of the recovery drinks
Professional soccer players may lose 6-7 pounds during the course of practice
A meal and water with an electrolyte drink between meals.
2% of body weight loss shows visible effects of performance
In general, water should suffice if trying to recover 12 ounces (kid) versus 72 ounces (adult)
Losing abnormal amounts of sweat
Headaches
Nausea
Fatigue
Cramping
Weighing in and out should be done with caution.
There is not one that has all of the needs of an athlete.
Most products are insufficient for high-level athlete carb needs
3 to1 or 4 to 1 ratio is ideal for carbs/protein but needs to look at the big picture.
20-40 grams of protein
I do not push it for high school athletes but it is safe.
Following the guidelines is important
The benefit is really for the high-level athletes
It also helps with glycogen replenishment
As far as protein synthesis goes 20-40 grams is the general window
Adding glycogen to protein does not improve glycogen uptake
Focus on carbs if there are small windows between competitions or training sessions.
4.6
4444 ratings
Post Exercise Recovery Nutrition is one of the topics Brett Singer addresses with high school, college, and professional sports in Houston as part of the Ironman Sports Medicine team.
Cliff Bar and Gatorade
Gatorade and a banana
Applesauce and Gatorade
Gummy bears or Fruit snack
Choose any two of them and that should get you to the right amount.
Brett uses the USOC recovery chart
Glycemic Index Chart by National Library of Medicine
Milk is more effective at rehydration than just water.
If you are eating then you probably do not need the recovery drink
Situations dictate different needs.
The 10-year-old kid will likely need less than an adult
Sodium and Chloride are the most important components of the recovery drinks
Professional soccer players may lose 6-7 pounds during the course of practice
A meal and water with an electrolyte drink between meals.
2% of body weight loss shows visible effects of performance
In general, water should suffice if trying to recover 12 ounces (kid) versus 72 ounces (adult)
Losing abnormal amounts of sweat
Headaches
Nausea
Fatigue
Cramping
Weighing in and out should be done with caution.
There is not one that has all of the needs of an athlete.
Most products are insufficient for high-level athlete carb needs
3 to1 or 4 to 1 ratio is ideal for carbs/protein but needs to look at the big picture.
20-40 grams of protein
I do not push it for high school athletes but it is safe.
Following the guidelines is important
The benefit is really for the high-level athletes
It also helps with glycogen replenishment
As far as protein synthesis goes 20-40 grams is the general window
Adding glycogen to protein does not improve glycogen uptake
Focus on carbs if there are small windows between competitions or training sessions.
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