In the world of professional and recreational sport today
the prevalence of supplementation in a bid to enhance performance is widespread
and estimated to be at between 57-94% of athletes (Ronsen et al. 1999). In one
study (Lazie et al. 2009), 75% of the 912 athletes analysed used at least one
dietary supplementation product. The most common of those used were
multivitamins, taken by over half of the subjects. However, in an eight month
study conducted some time before that of Lazie’s it was found that although
vitamin and mineral supplementation increased blood vitamin levels, no specific
performance benefits were evident (Telford et al. 1992). Many claim their
reasoning behind taking multivitamins is as a ‘safety net’ to ensure adequate
levels of each micronutrient in the body, however research has shown that if
one has a healthy and balanced diet they will already receive plenty of these
nutrients (Rodriguez at al. 2009). It should also be stated that in the case of
a poor diet with little fresh fruit or vegetables, multivitamin supplements
should not replace the role of food, this may give an athlete a false sense of
security and lead to detrimental health effects.
Unpublished research from Depiesse revealed the reasons
given by athletes for their ingestion of dietary supplements:
- To aid recovery from training
- Prevent or treat illness
- For general health
- Performance improvement
- Compensate for poor diet
Of course many dietary supplements on the commercial market
today do have their evident ergogenic benefits, the first of which can be seen
in the various forms of protein supplements such as shakes, bars and snacks.
These products are easily accessible for the professional and recreational
market alike and provide a convenient means of ensuring that adequate protein
is ingested following a bout of exercise. Skeletal muscle synthesis is
stimulated through exercise (Biolo et al. 1995) and protein feeding (Rennie et
al. 1982), this effect can be enhanced by the consumption of protein following
activity to promote a positive net protein balance within the skeletal muscle
(Moore et al. 2009). Muscle protein synthesis is specifically maximised by the
intake of 20g of high quality protein (Moore et al. 2009), intake below 20g
results in sub optimal rates of muscle protein synthesis whereas intake above
leads to irreversible amino acid oxidation. However, this is often the case,
with many individuals overcompensating their protein intake which only requires
the excretion of its nitrogen component. For the active elderly population a
higher dose of post exercise protein is beneficial as they are more receptive
to protein than younger exercisers. Although there is no metabolic window for
this enhancement of muscle protein synthesis, it may be of benefit to eat
within half an hour of a workout in order to replenish other physiological
stores such as glycogen.
Another popular supplement, especially among strength and
power athletes is creatine. Having been proven to improve power, strength and
intermittent sprint performance through the stimulation of muscle anabolism
following resistance exercise. The net result of which is muscle hypertrophy
alongside increases in free creatine and phosphorylcreatine content. With
regards to endurance exercise, nitrate supplementation has provided promising
and significant results in reducing oxygen consumption during submaximal
exercise and the ATP cost of muscular contraction.
Supplementation may also be of benefit to particular
populations, especially female athletes involved in endurance sports or on a
reduced calorie diet due to participation in aesthetic sports such as
gymnastics. Poor nutrition alongside intense training, low body fat and weight
loss can blunt oestrogen synthesis by peripheral fat. It is the effect of this,
coupled with hormonal alterations that results in exercise related amenorrhea.
Many of these supplements can however result in the
unintentional ingestion of banned substances (Geyer et al. 2004) as a result of
contamination or poor labelling (Baylis et al). Not only can such an event lead
to lifetime ban from sport but also potentially life threatening adverse
effects to health.
It has also been observed that herbal supplements such as ginseng, guarna and non-herbal products including zinc and chromium can lead to detrimental health effects.
It has also been observed that herbal supplements such as ginseng, guarna and non-herbal products including zinc and chromium can lead to detrimental health effects.
It is fair to state that the use of dietary supplements is
extensive among the sporting population, this is at both a professional and
recreational level. However, these individuals should be made aware that few
supplements can match there extravagant ergogenic claims and should also never
be used to compensate for a poor diet. This also highlights the need for the
education of coaches and instructors as it has been found they pose the most
influence on an athlete’s dietary habits. Lastly, the risk of obtaining a
positive doping test as a result of poor supplement labelling or contamination
is very much real and so these risks should be balanced against the potentials
benefits before ingestion.
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