1 / 47

Chapter 10 Nutrients, Physical Activity, and the Body’s Responses

Chapter 10 Nutrients, Physical Activity, and the Body’s Responses. Nutrition : Concepts & Controversies, 12e Sizer/Whitney. Learning Objectives. Discuss the short-term and long-term benefits of achieving cardiorespiratory fitness.

audi
Download Presentation

Chapter 10 Nutrients, Physical Activity, and the Body’s Responses

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 10Nutrients, Physical Activity, and the Body’s Responses Nutrition: Concepts & Controversies, 12e Sizer/Whitney

  2. Learning Objectives • Discuss the short-term and long-term benefits of achieving cardiorespiratory fitness. • Explain how the 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans can be incorporated into anyone’s lifestyle. Suggest simple ways to increase activity level throughout the day.

  3. Learning Objectives • Explain why it is important for an athlete to maintain blood glucose levels before, during, and after vigorous exercise. • Describe how an athlete’s body uses dietary protein during and after strenuous exercise.

  4. Learning Objectives • Discuss some reasons why female endurance athletes may be vulnerable to iron deficiency. • Evaluate whether conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) and other ergogenic aids are useful for obtaining an ideal body composition for sports.

  5. Introduction • Physical activity and nutrition • Needs • Energy-yielding nutrients • Vitamins and minerals • Results • Regulation of energy-yielding nutrients • Body composition • Daily calorie allowance

  6. Fitness • Depends on physical activity or exercise • Movement, muscle contraction, & energy expenditure • Benefits • Chronic disease • Longevity • Disease resistance • Numerous other benefits

  7. Physical Activity Guidelines • 2008 Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans • Aerobic physical activity & resistance training • Moderate vs. vigorous intensity • Health-care provider advise • Accumulated weekly totals • Weight maintenance • Sport performance

  8. Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans

  9. Intensity of Physical Activity

  10. American College of Sport Medicine’s Guidelines for Physical Fitness

  11. The Essentials of Fitness • Components of fitness • Adaptations • Athletes • Muscle power • Agility • Reaction times • Fatigue

  12. How Do Muscles Gain in Size and Strength? • Activity choices • Overload • Balance of activity and rest • Work different muscle groups • Muscles need rest • Replenish and adapt • Specific training • Hormones and muscle growth

  13. What Are the Benefits of Resistance Training? • Progressive weight training • Prevent and manage chronic disease • Muscle strength & size, power, or endurance • Resistance and repetitions • Appearance • Mobility and bone loss • Slows loss of physical mobility • Maximize and maintain bone mass

  14. How Does Cardiorespiratory Training Benefit the Heart? • Enhances capacity • Heart, lungs, and blood • Enhances efficiency • Delivery of oxygen • VO2 max • Removal of wastes • Blood lipid profile • Heart disease risk

  15. How Does Cardiorespiratory Training Benefit the Heart? • Effective training activities • Elevate heart rate • Sustained for longer than 20 minutes • Use most of the large-muscle groups • Pulse check

  16. The Active Body’s Use of Fuels • Fuels • Mixtures • Vary • Excess postexercise oxygen consumption (EPOC) • High intensity activities • Cardiac output • Fuel usage

  17. Delivery of Oxygen by the Heart and Lungs to the Muscles

  18. Glucose Use and Storage • Muscle glucose • Retains glycogen for own use • Liver glucose • Glycogen and endurance • High-carbohydrate diets

  19. The Effect of Diet on Physical Endurance

  20. Activity Intensity, Glucose Use, and Glycogen Stores • Energy stored as glycogen • Anaerobic use of glucose • Quick energy • Muscle glycogen reserves • Aerobic use of glucose • Energy from glucose and fatty acids • Lactate • Anaerobic activity • Muscle size and strength

  21. Glucose and Fatty Acids in Their Energy-Releasing Pathways in Muscle Cells

  22. Activity Duration, Glucose Use, and Glycogen Stores • Glucose use • Duration of activity • Intensity of activity • Blood glucose and activity • Dietary strategies • High carbohydrate diet daily • Consume glucose during activity • Consume carbohydrate shortly after exercise

  23. Carbohydrate Needs of Athletes

  24. Degree of Training Affects Glycogen Use • Muscles adapt to store more glycogen • Trained muscles burn more fat

  25. Fat and Physical Activity • Body fat as fuel for activity • Sources of fat • Importance of strength training • Fat in the athlete’s diet • Performance • Omega-3 fatty acids • Intensity and duration • Degree of training

  26. Protein for Building Muscles and for Fuel • Muscle protein synthesis • Up to two days after activity • Intensity and pattern of muscle contraction • Muscle cells only build proteins as needed • Dietary protein • Supplements • High-quality proteins • Fuel for physical activity • Factors that regulate protein use

  27. How Much Protein Should An Athlete Consume? • DRI vs. other authorities • Nature of chosen activity

  28. Do Nutrient Supplements Benefit Athletic Performance? • Well-nourished athletes • More food means more nutrients • Supplement timing • Body use takes hours or days • Preventing deficiencies • Impede performance

  29. Nutrients of Concern • Vitamin E • Physical activity creates more free radicals • Benefits of vitamin E supplements • Studies are conflicting • Interference with absorption • Iron • Deficiency impairs performance • Groups at risk for deficiency • Sports anemia

  30. Water Losses During Physical Activity • Water losses • Breathing and sweating • Dehydration • Sweat and temperature regulation • Heat stroke • Potentially fatal • Reduce risk • Hypothermia • Symptoms

  31. Fluid and Electrolyte Needs During Physical Activity • Hydrate and rehydrate • Thirst signal • Hourly sweat rate • Water • Endurance athletes • Electrolyte losses and replacement • Minerals • Sports drinks vs. regular diet

  32. Sodium Depletion and Water Intoxication • Replenishing electrolytes • Crucial time • Hyponatremia • Differs from dehydration • Heat cramps • Sodium

  33. Other Beverages • Caffeine • Moderate doses • Iced tea • Energy drinks • Carbonated beverages • Alcoholic beverages • Diuretic

  34. What Do Sports Drinks Have to Offer? • Fluid • Glucose • Sodium and other electrolytes • Psychological edge

  35. Choosing a Performance Diet • Nutrient density • Balance • Carbohydrate intake • Liquid carbohydrate supplements • Protein • Milk and meat products

  36. Nutritious High-Carbohydrate Meals for Athletes

  37. Choosing a Performance Diet • Planning an athlete’s meals • Fruit and vegetable intake • Pregame meals • Easily digested • Contain fluids • Finish eating 3 to 4 hours before competition • “Complete” bars and drinks

  38. Eating Patterns for Athletes

  39. Examples of High-Carbohydrate Pregame Meals

  40. Ergogenic Aids: Breakthroughs, Gimmicks, or Dangers? Controversy 10

  41. Ergogenic Aids • Advertorials • Dietary supplements • Escape regulation • Legitimate research • Large majority of ergogenic aid claims are not supported

  42. Ergogenic Aids • Caffeine • Endurance vs. high-intensity activities • Adverse effects • Diuretic • Carnitine • Nonessential nutrient • Chromium picolinate • Carbohydrate and lipid metabolism • Safety concerns

  43. Ergogenic Aids • Creatine • Hypothesized benefits • Confirmed effect • Weight gain • Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) • Not worth their price • Sodium bicarbonate • Unpleasant side effects

  44. Ergogenic Aids • Amino acid supplements • Maximum gains • Essential amino acids in system prior to physical work • Best source • Food • Reasons against supplements

  45. Ergogenic Aids • Whey protein and other protein supplements • By product of cheese making • Timing of protein intake • Complete meal replacers • Fall short of ‘complete’ nutrition • Risk of dental caries • Nutritional uses • Pregame meal • Between-meal snack

  46. Hormone Preparations • Anabolic steroid hormones • Illegal and dangerous • Steroid alternative supplements • Herbal or insect sterols • Prohormones • Androstenedione • DHEA • Drugs posing as supplements

  47. Physical Risks of Taking Steroid Hormone Drugs

More Related