Should you be lugging a bottle of commercial sports drink to your child's soccer game? What drinks provide the best
nutrition for optimal performance? The answers to these questions depend upon
how long and how strenuous the exercise is. If you or your child exercise
moderately for less than an hour, plain water is the best source of fluids.
Water is absorbed more rapidly than any other liquid, but once you begin adding
stuff to water, the absorption slows. Drink ahead. Drink a few glasses of water
before a game. During the game, drink enough to quench thirst, and after the
game drink enough water to quench thirst and then drink at least two more
glasses, since thirst is not a reliable indicator of adequate hydration. For
high endurance exercise lasting longer than 90 minutes, you will probably need a
carbo-lyte-hydration drink (i.e., one containing sugar, salts, and water).
During strenuous exercise, lasting more than one hour, sports drinks help
prevent dehydration, a major
cause of muscle fatigue. The main nutritional elements in a commercial or
homemade sports drink are water, carbohydrates, and electrolytes (sodium and
potassium).
Try these carbo-hydration tips to enhance performance, and therefore
enjoyment, of sports.
- Avoid junk juice "drinks," which contain a tiny bit of juice and a lot of
added sweeteners. Instead, use "100 percent juice."
- Avoid carbonated drinks which can leave the athlete feeling bloated.
- Before the game, instead of soft drinks, drink plain water. Besides the
sugar in the soft drink slowing the absorption of much needed water, it could
trigger low blood sugar during the game, just what the athlete doesn't need.
- Instead of commercial sports drinks, you could make your own. Juices, such
as apple, orange, or grape are an excellent base for sports drinks, since they
contain both glucose and fructose sugars, as well as potassium, which is lost
with sweating. Fructose sugar is one of the best carbohydrates for replacing
used up muscle glycogen stores. Add one teaspoon of salt (to replace the sodium
lost while sweating) to a quart of dilute juice, and you've made your own sports
drink.
- The best time to drink commercial or homemade sports drinks is during
exercise, since the carbs in the drink do not cause high blood sugar
fluctuations because insulin is not secreted during exercise. (Drinking a high-
sugar drink prior to exercise may trigger insulin and lead to hypoglycemia in
the middle of the game.)
- As a general rule, sip one quart of cool rehydration liquid per hour of
strenuous exercise.
- It's better to drink liquid calories rather than solid food during exercise,
since solids remain in the stomach longer and delay the absorption of the much-
needed carbs and water.
A useful reference for eating and drinking wisely during exercise is: Nancy
Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook, Human Kinetics Publishing, 1996.