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      A step towards personalized sports nutrition: carbohydrate intake during exercise.

      1
      Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          There have been significant changes in the understanding of the role of carbohydrates during endurance exercise in recent years, which allows for more specific and more personalized advice with regard to carbohydrate ingestion during exercise. The new proposed guidelines take into account the duration (and intensity) of exercise and advice is not restricted to the amount of carbohydrate; it also gives direction with respect to the type of carbohydrate. Studies have shown that during exercise lasting approximately 1 h in duration, a mouth rinse or small amounts of carbohydrate can result in a performance benefit. A single carbohydrate source can be oxidized at rates up to approximately 60 g/h and this is the recommendation for exercise that is more prolonged (2-3 h). For ultra-endurance events, the recommendation is higher at approximately 90 g/h. Carbohydrate ingested at such high ingestion rates must be a multiple transportable carbohydrates to allow high oxidation rates and prevent the accumulation of carbohydrate in the intestine. The source of the carbohydrate may be a liquid, semisolid, or solid, and the recommendations may need to be adjusted downward when the absolute exercise intensity is low and thus carbohydrate oxidation rates are also low. Carbohydrate intake advice is independent of body weight as well as training status. Therefore, although these guidelines apply to most athletes, they are highly dependent on the type and duration of activity. These new guidelines may replace the generic existing guidelines for carbohydrate intake during endurance exercise.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Sports Med
          Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          1179-2035
          0112-1642
          May 2014
          : 44 Suppl 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Gatorade Sports Science Institute, Barrington, IL, USA, a.e.jeukendrup@bham.ac.uk.
          Article
          10.1007/s40279-014-0148-z
          4008807
          24791914
          a5cf40e0-59f1-44db-95e9-ddcfe056152f
          History

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