Nutrition: It's different for girls
The logic goes something like this: we all need carbs to fuel exercise. Long and/or back-to-back sessions strain this limited system. While there’s always plenty of fat to find for fuel, carbs in the muscle can be exhausted very easily.
This is where sports drinks come to the rescue – helping us get more training effect from rides, extending our endurance and making us faster.
However, while this general concept is true and may be ‘literally’ correct, there are some important differences between the sexes that mean that use of drinks and carbohydrates in the diet needs fine tuning for men and women. Recent research studies are to blame for rocking the boat.
Take 14 athletes and fast them overnight, give them a few hundred calories breakfast and have them ride for 90 minutes. During the ride provide them with either with a placebo (Aspartame flavoured water) or a sports drink (8% corn derived carbohydrate solution with a marker added). Look at their expired air and then calculate their fat, protein, internal (glycogen) and exogenous (sports drink) carbohydrate use.
That’s what the boffins at York University, Toronto did [1] with surprising results…
Horses for courses? We cannot be sure why evolution has made women and men different in their fuel use but what the research shows is that women and men need to be given slightly different advice. There isn’t a one fits-all rule. And for all those nay-sayers who don’t agree with supplements, or new training methods or a change to the status quo, there is other research to support the idea that women and men have differing relationships with carbohydrate when taking exercise into account. Argue the toss but the science backs this up…
The graph above shows that as the exercise session progressed the female riders were using more of the carbohydrate provided by the sports drink than their male counterparts. The fuel use was measured relative to lean body mass (LBM) and at the 90 minute point the women were using carbs from the drink at a rate equivalent to 35grams per hour. However, the drink carbs were not the main source for premium fuel as carbohydrate from muscle glycogen stores was being used at three times the rate of that provided by the sports drink at the 90 minute point.
Put these two sources of carb fuel together and close to 2.5grams of carbs were being used every minute, slightly more than the 2.28g/min used when the women were using just water. The data showed more fat use when both sexes drank water instead of a carb drink (men 21.9% vs 16.2%; women 22.8% vs 19.8%) but remember this was just a 60% VO2max session, a lot less than many of you would routinely ride at and the exercise also stopped after 90 minutes.
Lactic acid levels in the blood peaked at 3.5mmol and dropped to 3.0mmol by the end of the exercise illustrating that the athletes were riding within themselves. Overall, 70% of fuel came from carbs in this 90 minute ride at 60% of VO2max.
However, the females used 25% more carbohydrate from the sports drink than the males – this represented 14% of total female energy use and 11% of the males’.
It gets better for women
So women use more fat than men and are better at using the fuel contained in sports drinks. This is the reason why studies on women athletes have shown less performance improvement from carbo-loading than men. If men are from Mars and women from Venus, Martians use more stored muscle glycogen whilst Venutians use more carbohydrate from in-session grazing. And as women benefit less from muscle glycogen ‘loading’ their diet need not be as rich in carbohydrate.
Recent research suggests women can be on a low- or high-carb diet for six days (that’s either 3, 5 or 8g/kg of body weight of carbs per day) and this does not affect their performance in a test in which fatigue hit at around an hour [2]. Women are the diesel version of the species – so we need to think how we advise them how to eat on a daily basis and how to fuel during exercise.
FUELLING ADVICE
WOMEN
- Use a diet that does not over-emphasise carbohydrate
- Ensure use of carb drink in sessions to assist fuel provision and endurance
- Do not heavily carbo-load before events but ensure regular carbohydrate meals balanced with good protein sources and fats
MEN
- Use a diet that ensures at least 55% of calories from carbohydrate
- Ensure use of carb drink in sessions to assist fuel provision and endurance but ensure post-exercise hi-carb snacking is planned for
- Carbo-load before longer events and sessions by focusing on carbohydrate (2-3d) after several days(2-3d) of meals with slightly increased (healthy)protein and fat calorie foods
REFERENCES
[1] Riddell, M.C et al (2003) Substrate utilisation during exercise performed with and without glucose ingestion in female and male endurance-trained
athletes. Int. J Sports Nutrition & Exerc. Meta. 13(4): 407-421
[2] Dolins, K.R et al. (2003) Effect of variable carbohydrate intake on exercise performance in female endurance cyclists. Int. J Sports Nutrition & Exerc.
Meta. 13(4): 422-435
User Comments
There are 8 comments on this post
Showing 1 - 8 of 8 comments
-
stephenfox
Posted Wed 4 Jun, 2:49 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Aspartame-laden water is hardly a "placebo." The neurotoxic effects of just one glass or a few milligrams are enough to cause neurodegenerative symptoms, especially in high metabolic rate folks like bike riders. Their performance would be impugned right away.... I must say, whoever put this "research" together doesn't know a damned thing about aspartame. Maybe one of the aspartame manufacturers had a hand in this? I hope not, but If it is part of a placebo, what's next: arsenic? DDT? Mercury? There is a huge legal battle shaping up in the UK right now on this poison and one of the UK's largest supermarket chain; details are here: http://www.prlog.org/10070694-uk-supermarket-chain-bans-aspartame-from-own-label-products-japanese-manufacturer-ajinomoto-sues.html
This is what we wrote for the Hawaii Senate, perhaps the strongest document in a legislative context ever:
http://www.prlog.org/10070694-uk-supermarket-chain-bans-aspartame-from-own-label-products-japanese-manufacturer-ajinomoto-sues.html
Please take the time to read these two articles, to comprehend the gravity of my comments.
Truly,
Stephen Fox, Managing Editor Santa Fe Sun News
Founder, New Millennium Fine Art, Since 1980
-
stephenfox
Posted Wed 4 Jun, 4:07 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Sorry to have put the wrong URL for the Hawaii Senate Resolution Re: Aspartame
This is the correct one:
In a strictly legislative context, his most important writing has been for the Hawaii Senate: [http://www.prlog.org/10056715-hawaii-senate-aspartame-resolution-requesting-fda-to-rescind-approval-for-united-states-markets.html]
Anybody out there want to contact their state legislators and see if we can't get this resolution introduced all over the USA and in other nations? Not that this question will be moot when Obama appoints a new FDA Commissioner, not moot at all....
If so, please reply directly to my email. Thanks.
Stephen Fox
stephen@santafefineart.com
-
Tom Butcher
Posted Wed 4 Jun, 6:02 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
If you believe Joe Beer you can't train without sports drink - just about every article he writes he promotes it.
-
Super Fatty
Posted Wed 4 Jun, 7:41 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
I used to ride with just water until I got a free bag of Powerbar at a race. So I filled my two bottles and since then have never gone back to water. I can ride for much longer without eating and water after a while does not quench my thirst.
-
Joe Beer
Posted Thu 5 Jun, 11:54 am UTC Flag as inappropriate
I advocate both using sports and also NOT using them.
I have written about fasted, on-water rides to promote
the use of IMTG fats, I think Mr Butcher wasn't watching carefully.
Cycling Science issue 194 talked about fasted water rides.
Also, off the top of my head, issue 205 Jan 2008 from Your Month on
Bikes (written by me):
"Carry a bottle of water even on the shortest ride. This can be useful
for getting debris from your eyes, throat or any minor cuts should you fall"
I give clients water-only sessions to do in the morning, anything from
30 to 120 minutes depending on the person, their health and fitness level.
I studied carbohydrate drinks during my degree and continue to sift
through the data on how carbohydrate sources can be used to improve performance. To ignore them is a bit luddite - akin to not believing in petrol
stations if you drive a car.
I do not advocate using sports drinks when they are not likely to help,
but on the other side of the coin there are still those that believe
drinks are a scam and totally ignore the benefits they can offer when used
correctly.
It is a matter of balance and I have presented both sides of the
argument.
Many Thanks
Joe
-
howiejmidlands
Posted Thu 5 Jun, 6:24 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Dear Mr Butcher
As one of the Readers Team riders for Cycling Plus, i have had the courtesy of Joes advice since March. Let me assure you, that at no stage whatsoever, has Joe hammered home the sports drink message. I have been asked to ride some rides, in the morning fasted, and only use water.
As a rider returning to cycling after a 26 year sojourn, the new methods of training including hydration are very interesting. The days of only water and cramps are gone. I am now riding harder and longer, using sports drinks, and i may add, sports drinks different to those promoted on JBST.
Sports science has moved on from going out and hammering it for a few hours with 500ml of water, and for me the results are staggering and rewarding.
-
richardsonn
Posted Fri 6 Jun, 3:37 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Tom,
as a coach one of the things Joe does really well is take the mistery out of sports drinks, he has helped me understand the correct in take of them and certainly doesn't have me using them on every workout.
His nutritional advice has helped me improve in training,racing and recovery. The article doesn't seem to be pushing sports drinks, and if aren't using them on your rides longer than an hour I would suggest you give them a go.
-
Nicky D-S
Posted Tue 10 Jun, 5:58 pm UTC Flag as inappropriate
Hi, I'm both female and a client of Joe Beer's. For the record my training programme has sessions both with and without sport's drinks. Having previously always trained and raced with 'water only' I was pleasantly surprised to discover the improvement a 'tech' drink made. Also just in case there are some lingering doubts - maybe ' is Joe on someone's payrole?'. He's always supported me to go the natural, no additive path and does not appear to support any one sports drink.
- 1










Post this story to: