Kerksick Chad M, Arent Shawn, Schoenfeld Brad J, Stout Jeffrey R, Campbell Bill, Wilborn Colin D, Taylor Lem, Kalman Doug, Smith-Ryan Abbie E, Kreider Richard B, Willoughby Darryn, Arciero Paul J, VanDusseldorp Trisha A, Ormsbee Michael J, Wildman Robert, Greenwood Mike, Ziegenfuss Tim N, Aragon Alan A, Antonio Jose
Exercise and Performance Nutrition Laboratory, School of Health Sciences, Lindenwood University, St. Charles, MO USA.
IFNH Center for Health & Human Performance, Department of Kinesiology & Health, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ USA.
J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2017 Aug 29;14:33. doi: 10.1186/s12970-017-0189-4. eCollection 2017.
The International Society of Sports Nutrition (ISSN) provides an objective and critical review regarding the timing of macronutrients in reference to healthy, exercising adults and in particular highly trained individuals on exercise performance and body composition. The following points summarize the position of the ISSN:Nutrient timing incorporates the use of methodical planning and eating of whole foods, fortified foods and dietary supplements. The timing of energy intake and the ratio of certain ingested macronutrients may enhance recovery and tissue repair, augment muscle protein synthesis (MPS), and improve mood states following high-volume or intense exercise.Endogenous glycogen stores are maximized by following a high-carbohydrate diet (8-12 g of carbohydrate/kg/day [g/kg/day]); moreover, these stores are depleted most by high volume exercise.If rapid restoration of glycogen is required (< 4 h of recovery time) then the following strategies should be considered:aggressive carbohydrate refeeding (1.2 g/kg/h) with a preference towards carbohydrate sources that have a high (> 70) glycemic indexthe addition of caffeine (3-8 mg/kg)combining carbohydrates (0.8 g/kg/h) with protein (0.2-0.4 g/kg/h) Extended (> 60 min) bouts of high intensity (> 70% VOmax) exercise challenge fuel supply and fluid regulation, thus carbohydrate should be consumed at a rate of 30-60 g of carbohydrate/h in a 6-8% carbohydrate-electrolyte solution (6-12 fluid ounces) every 10-15 min throughout the entire exercise bout, particularly in those exercise bouts that span beyond 70 min. When carbohydrate delivery is inadequate, adding protein may help increase performance, ameliorate muscle damage, promote euglycemia and facilitate glycogen re-synthesis.Carbohydrate ingestion throughout resistance exercise (e.g., 3-6 sets of 8-12 repetition maximum [RM] using multiple exercises targeting all major muscle groups) has been shown to promote euglycemia and higher glycogen stores. Consuming carbohydrate solely or in combination with protein during resistance exercise increases muscle glycogen stores, ameliorates muscle damage, and facilitates greater acute and chronic training adaptations.Meeting the total daily intake of protein, preferably with evenly spaced protein feedings (approximately every 3 h during the day), should be viewed as a primary area of emphasis for exercising individuals.Ingestion of essential amino acids (EAA; approximately 10 g)either in free form or as part of a protein bolus of approximately 20-40 g has been shown to maximally stimulate muscle protein synthesis (MPS).Pre- and/or post-exercise nutritional interventions (carbohydrate + protein or protein alone) may operate as an effective strategy to support increases in strength and improvements in body composition. However, the size and timing of a pre-exercise meal may impact the extent to which post-exercise protein feeding is required.Post-exercise ingestion (immediately to 2-h post) of high-quality protein sources stimulates robust increases in MPS.In non-exercising scenarios, changing the frequency of meals has shown limited impact on weight loss and body composition, with stronger evidence to indicate meal frequency can favorably improve appetite and satiety. More research is needed to determine the influence of combining an exercise program with altered meal frequencies on weight loss and body composition with preliminary research indicating a potential benefit.Ingesting a 20-40 g protein dose (0.25-0.40 g/kg body mass/dose) of a high-quality source every three to 4 h appears to most favorably affect MPS rates when compared to other dietary patterns and is associated with improved body composition and performance outcomes.Consuming casein protein ( 30-40 g) prior to sleep can acutely increase MPS and metabolic rate throughout the night without influencing lipolysis.
国际运动营养学会(ISSN)针对健康的成年运动者,特别是高水平训练的个体,就大量营养素摄入时间对运动表现和身体成分的影响进行了客观且批判性的综述。以下要点总结了ISSN的立场:
营养摄入时间涉及对天然食物、强化食品和膳食补充剂进行有计划的安排和食用。能量摄入的时间以及某些摄入的大量营养素的比例,可能会促进恢复和组织修复,增强肌肉蛋白质合成(MPS),并改善高强度或大运动量运动后的情绪状态。
通过高碳水化合物饮食(8 - 12克碳水化合物/千克/天[克/千克/天])可使内源性糖原储备最大化;此外,大量运动最容易消耗这些储备。
如果需要快速恢复糖原(恢复时间<4小时),则应考虑以下策略:
积极的碳水化合物再补充(1.2克/千克/小时),优先选择血糖指数高(>70)的碳水化合物来源
添加咖啡因(3 - 8毫克/千克)
将碳水化合物(0.8克/千克/小时)与蛋白质(0.2 - 0.4克/千克/小时)结合
持续时间较长(>60分钟)的高强度(>70%最大摄氧量)运动对能量供应和液体调节构成挑战,因此在整个运动过程中,应每10 - 15分钟以6 - 8%的碳水化合物 - 电解质溶液(6 - 12液量盎司)的形式摄入约30 - 60克碳水化合物/小时,尤其是在持续时间超过70分钟的运动中。当碳水化合物供应不足时,补充蛋白质可能有助于提高运动表现、减轻肌肉损伤、促进血糖正常化并促进糖原再合成。
在抗阻运动(例如,针对所有主要肌肉群进行3 - 6组,每组8 - 12次最大重复次数[RM])过程中摄入碳水化合物已被证明可促进血糖正常化并增加糖原储备。在抗阻运动期间单独或与蛋白质一起摄入碳水化合物可增加肌肉糖原储备、减轻肌肉损伤,并促进更大程度的急性和慢性训练适应性。
满足每日蛋白质总摄入量,最好是均匀分布蛋白质摄入时间(白天约每3小时一次),应被视为运动个体的主要重点领域。
摄入必需氨基酸(EAA;约10克),无论是游离形式还是作为约20 - 40克蛋白质团块的一部分,都已被证明能最大程度地刺激肌肉蛋白质合成(MPS)。
运动前和/或运动后的营养干预(碳水化合物 + 蛋白质或仅蛋白质)可能是支持力量增加和身体成分改善的有效策略。然而,运动前一餐的量和时间可能会影响运动后蛋白质摄入的需求程度。
运动后立即至2小时内摄入优质蛋白质来源可显著刺激MPS增加。
在非运动场景中,改变进餐频率对体重减轻和身体成分的影响有限,有更强的证据表明进餐频率可有利地改善食欲和饱腹感。需要更多研究来确定将运动计划与改变进餐频率相结合对体重减轻和身体成分的影响,初步研究表明可能有益。
与其他饮食模式相比,每三到四小时摄入20 - 40克优质蛋白质剂量(0.25 - 0.40克/千克体重/剂量)似乎对MPS速率最有利,并与改善身体成分和运动表现结果相关。
睡前摄入酪蛋白(约30 - 40克)可在整个夜间急性增加MPS和代谢率,而不影响脂肪分解。