| Literature DB >> 18500962 |
Lonnie Lowery1, Cassandra E Forsythe.
Abstract
Despite a more than adequate protein intake in the general population, athletes have special needs and situations that bring it to the forefront. Overtraining is one example. Hard-training athletes are different from sedentary persons from the sub-cellular to whole-organism level. Moreover, competitive, "free-living" (less-monitored) athletes often encounter negative energy balance, sub-optimal dietary variety, injuries, endocrine exacerbations and immune depression. These factors, coupled with "two-a-day" practices and in-season demands require that protein not be dismissed as automatically adequate or worse, deleterious to health. When applying research to practice settings, one should consider methodological aspects such as population specificity and control variables such as energy balance. This review will address data pertinent to the topic of athletic protein needs, particularly from a standpoint of overtraining and soft tissue recovery. Research-driven strategies for adjusting nutrition and exercise assessments will be offered for consideration. Potentially helpful nutrition interventions for preventing and treating training complications will also be presented.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 18500962 PMCID: PMC2129153 DOI: 10.1186/1550-2783-3-1-42
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Summary: Reported functions of proteins and amino acids of interest to free living athletes.
| 1. Building blocks for structural, contractile, hormonal, immune, enzymatic and other bodily proteins |
| 2. Provision of kcal and contribution to muscle glycogen in a relatively carbohydrate-(insulin-) resistant state during eccentric recovery and sleep debt (complete proteins, Gln) |
| 3. Potentially maintained performance during an otherwise stale state (complete proteins, amino acids) |
| 4. Stimulation of protein synthesis in an otherwise catabolic state (Leu) |
| 5. Provision of oxidative fuel to skeletal muscle (Leu), as well as the gut and white blood cells during immune stress (Gln) |
| 6. Elevated antioxidant capacity via glutathione (complete proteins, Gln) |
| 7. Improved collagen synthesis and potentially wound healing (Gln) |
| 8. Increased nasal antibodies and/or decreased incidence of infection (Gln) |
| 9. Provision of concentrated nutrients to often poorly-fed athletes (animal protein foods) |
| 10. Defense against stress hormone exacerbations and sleep debt (Gln, alpha-lactalbumin) |
Suggestions regarding protein during sports nutrition counseling
| 1. Consider that the necessary control variables in research settings may make application to your client inappropriate. |
| 2. Recognize that both timing and total intake matter. |
| 3. Use caution not to fall prey to "protein counter-culture", despite the occasional overzealous athlete. Evidence-based practice requires objectivity. |
| 4. Consider that eccentric muscle trauma and underlying injury(-ies) increase energy demands and could make an apparently adequate kcal intake actually deficient. |
| 5. Remain aware of under-reporting on diet records and lack of dietary compensation to new energy expenditures. |
| 6. Remain cognizant that injuries and eating disorders may be concealed by an athlete. |
| 7. Appreciate that the unique psychological motivators of athletes require a unique counseling perspective. |