Lundstrom Emily A, De Souza Mary Jane, Khen Keiona M, Williams Nancy I
Pennsylvania State University, Women's Health and Exercise Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology, University Park, PA, USA.
J Int Soc Sports Nutr. 2025 Dec;22(1):2494846. doi: 10.1080/15502783.2025.2494846. Epub 2025 Apr 18.
Compared to the general population, athletes experience high energy expenditures requiring increased energy and macronutrient intakes to sustain training and optimize performance. While the International Olympic Committee (IOC) and International Society for Sports Nutrition (ISSN) have established recommendations for nutrient intakes, many athletes do not meet the recommended daily allowance (RDA) for the general population, and sport and sex-specific differences are not well documented. Exploration of within-day energy balance (WDEB) shows athletes may achieve energy balance by the end of the day but may present with poor WDEB. Data support that female athletes are at greater risk of nutrient deficiencies than their male counterparts, and it is unclear whether swimmers meet sport-specific nutrient intake and timing recommendations. Following our previous WDEB analysis, the purpose of this investigation was to assess dietary macronutrient intake as related to RDAs (USDA and IOC/ISSN), within-day macronutrient timing, and associated sex differences in swimmers.
In elite male and female swimmers ( = 25; 18-22 yr), we assessed energy intake (EI), total daily energy expenditure (TDEE), macronutrient intake (fat (FAT), protein (PRO), carbohydrate (CHO)) and timing during heavy training. Frequency analysis was utilized to determine the number of athletes meeting general and athlete-specific RDAs. Repeated-measures ANOVA was used to assess nutrient timing across sex groups.
When compared to IOC/ISSN daily recommendations, only 6/25 swimmers met FAT intake, 7/25 met CHO intake, and 24/25 met PRO intake IOC/ISSN daily recommendations.Males had greater EI and TDEE compared to females ( < 0.05). PRO consumption (% of EI) was a larger percentage of total intake in male vs females (28 ± 5% vs 23 ± 3%; F = 2.996; = 0.014). No swimmers met CHO recommendations (g⋅kg) pre- or during exercise for the first daily training session. 13/25 met pre-exercise CHO recommendations, while 6/25 and 11/25 met during and post-exercise CHO recommendations for the second training session. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed effects of sex and time on intake (g⋅kg LBM⋅hr) for FAT (Sex; F = 5.659, = 0.26; time; F = 12.068, = 0.006) and PRO (Sex; F = 6.719, = 0.016; time; F = 13.177, = 0.011). There was a significant sex*time interaction for CHO consumption (F = 6.520, = 0.017).
The results from this study demonstrate significant sex-differences, indicating that most swimmers meet athlete-specific recommendations for PRO, but not CHO or FAT intake. CHO timing for pre-, during, and post-exercise was met by only 52% swimmers. Results suggest that swimmers should prioritize CHO intake, emphasized around and during training bouts.
与普通人群相比,运动员的能量消耗较高,需要增加能量和常量营养素的摄入量以维持训练并优化表现。虽然国际奥委会(IOC)和国际运动营养学会(ISSN)已制定了营养素摄入量建议,但许多运动员未达到普通人群的每日推荐摄入量(RDA),且运动项目和性别差异的记录并不完善。对日内能量平衡(WDEB)的研究表明,运动员可能在一天结束时实现能量平衡,但日内能量平衡可能较差。数据支持女性运动员比男性运动员面临更大的营养素缺乏风险,目前尚不清楚游泳运动员是否符合特定运动项目的营养素摄入和时间建议。在我们之前进行的WDEB分析之后,本研究的目的是评估游泳运动员的膳食常量营养素摄入量与RDA(美国农业部和IOC/ISSN)的关系、日内常量营养素摄入时间以及相关的性别差异。
在25名精英男女游泳运动员(年龄18 - 22岁)中,我们评估了高强度训练期间的能量摄入量(EI)、每日总能量消耗(TDEE)、常量营养素摄入量(脂肪(FAT)、蛋白质(PRO)、碳水化合物(CHO))以及摄入时间。采用频率分析来确定达到一般人群和特定运动员RDA的运动员人数。使用重复测量方差分析来评估不同性别组之间的营养素摄入时间。
与IOC/ISSN的每日建议相比,只有6/25的游泳运动员达到脂肪摄入量建议,7/25达到碳水化合物摄入量建议,24/25达到蛋白质摄入量建议。男性的EI和TDEE高于女性(P < 0.05)。男性蛋白质摄入量占总摄入量的百分比(EI的%)高于女性(28 ± 5%对23 ± 3%;F = 2.996;P = 0.014)。在第一次日常训练中,没有游泳运动员在运动前或运动期间达到碳水化合物摄入量建议(g·kg)。在第二次训练中,13/25的运动员达到运动前碳水化合物摄入量建议,6/25和11/25的运动员分别达到运动期间和运动后碳水化合物摄入量建议。重复测量方差分析显示,性别和时间对脂肪摄入量(g·kg去脂体重·小时)(性别;F = 5.659,P = 0.26;时间;F = 12.068,P = 0.006)和蛋白质摄入量(性别;F = 6.719,P = 0.016;时间;F = 13.177,P = 0.011)有影响。碳水化合物摄入存在显著的性别*时间交互作用(F = 6.520,P = 0.017)。
本研究结果表明存在显著的性别差异,即大多数游泳运动员达到了特定运动员的蛋白质摄入量建议,但未达到碳水化合物或脂肪摄入量建议。只有52%的游泳运动员在运动前、运动期间和运动后达到了碳水化合物摄入时间建议。结果表明,游泳运动员应优先摄入碳水化合物,在训练期间及前后尤为重要。