NANCY CLARK Sports Nutritionist and Author
The Athletes's Kitchen Liquids with Calories
If you are among the many sweaty athletes who wonders
what to drink to quench your thirst, you may feel confused
by the abundant choices of fluids. There's plain ol' water,
sports drinks, soft drinks (sugar-sweetened or diet), 100%
fruit juices, juice drinks, milk (skim, lowfat or whole), beer,
wine….and the list goes on. As a sports dietitian, I get lots
of questions about what's best (or worst) to drink.
Here are my answers to just a few commonly asked questions about
liquids with calories.
Q. Should I stop drinking orange juice because it is
loaded with (fattening) carbs and sugar?
A. No! To start, carbs are not fattening, but rather an important
fuel for your muscles. Please do not knock OJ out of
your breakfast (and then, gulp, replace it with a Coffee
Coolatta). OJ offers a strong dose of vitamin C, potassium,
folate and other health protective nutrients. The trick is to
balance the OJ-calories into your daily calorie budget.
Q. After a hard workout, I really like having a Coke or
Pepsi. How bad is this — for recovery and for my health?
A. Many tired athletes welcome the combination of sugar +
caffeine + water to refuel, rehydrate and revive themselves.
While juice would offer far more vitamins and minerals,
dietary guidelines indicate that 10% of calories can appropriately
come from refined sugar. Hence, most athletes can
enjoy, if desired, 200 to 300 calories of daily sugar—a can or
two of soft drink. Would spending those calories on “premium
nutrition” contribute to greater health benefits in the
long run? Unclear.
Q. Are soft drinks causing the obesity epidemic?
A. In 1942, the average person drank 90 eight-ounce sodas
per year. By the year 2000, this jumped to 600 sodas per
year. America's obesity problem mirrors this increase in soft
drink consumption. The beverage industry states many
other changes have occurred in this time-span, specifically,
an increasingly sedentary lifestyle, so soda is not to blame.
Studies not funded by the beverage industry suggest
people who drink sugary beverages tend to be heavier than
those who do not. This might be because fluid calories fail
to “register” (that is, they may not satiate one's appetite), so
soda drinkers consume more calories per day. Other studies
report soda might trigger the desire to eat more food.
Hence, if soda drinking culminates in consuming more
calories than you burn off, the result is indeed weight gain.
You, as an athlete, can likely enjoy a daily soda without
fat gain if you keep the soda-calories within your daily calorie
budget. (And please, choose wholesome foods for the
rest of your sports diet!) Note: If you are concerned about
soft drinks being fattening, also pay attention to sports
drinks. Many thirsty athletes overlook the fact that chugging
a quart of sports drink after a workout (or during
lunch, for that matter) contributes 200 to 300 sugar calories—
and these calories do count!
Q. Soft drinks are sweetened with high fructose corn syrup
(HFCS). Is this really bad for our health?
A. Animal research suggests consuming fructose can lead to
weight gain due to changes in insulin and leptin, two hormones
that influence appetite. In humans, whether or not
HFCS promotes obesity requires more study. Food industry
research leads us to believe HFCS is not fattening. However,
other research hints that fructose is digested, absorbed and
metabolized differently than glucose in ways that favor fat
production. Your best bet? Drink less soda.
Q. Which is the healthier choice: regular soft drinks
(sweetened with HFCS) or diet soft drinks?
A. That’s a personal choice; I’d vote for water for myself!
Regular soda is filled with empty calories of sugar; diet soda
has artificial sweeteners—“unnatural” substances that are
rumored to cause cancer. Two recent studies show no link
between artificial sweeteners and cancer. Take your pick!
Q. Is green tea health protective?
A. Green tea is made from fresh tea leaves and, compared to
black or oolong teas, has a higher concentration of compounds
that may protect against heart disease and cancer,
particularly cancer of the breast, stomach and skin. Many of
the green tea studies have been done on animals or in
research labs. To date, the FDA says there is not enough scientific
evidence with human studies to prove that green tea
reduces the risk of cancer. Stay tuned.
I have clients who have started drinking Starbucks green
tea latte.This is a questionable way to invest in good health.
Starbucks 16-ounce Tazo Green Tea Latte offers 230 calories,
of which 60 are from fat and 140 from sugar. This likely
wipes out the possible health benefits of the green tea...
Q. What about Enviga and other green tea beverages that
claim to burn calories...?
A. Drinking Enviga is unlikely to solve your weight problem.
While the CocaCola Company claims the caffeine plus
green tea extracts in three cans of Enviga a day (@ $116 a
month) will result in burning 60 to 100 additional calories,
you could just as easily create that calorie deficit by drinking
less sports drink or eating one less cookie. Yet, desperate
dieters will try any gimic. Green tea-enhanced Celsius,
another “calorie-burning soda", saw more than $1.5 million
in revenue in 2006 and expects to blow past that figure this
year. Don’t fatten them up with your efforts to slim down!
Nancy Clark, MS, RD, CSSD (Board Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics) counsels both casual and competitive athletes in her private practice at Healthworks, the premier fitness center in Chestnut Hill MA (617-383-6100). Her Sports Nutrition Guidebook, Food Guide for Marathoners, and Cyclist’s Food Guide are available via www.nancyclarkrd.com. See also sportsnutritionworkshop.com.
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