![]() |
|||||||||||||||
|
|
Physical Tuning | Skills & Drills | Thought Design | Team Work Electrolyte Replenishment I’ve made some big mistakes over the years in vain attempts to resolve heat and electrolyte related problems, from indiscriminately tossing down sodium tablets to guzzling almost every sports drink ever created. For my all-time greatest disaster, I’d choose the 1995 Race Across America. I was in peak physical condition, but I was not prepared for the extreme heat I encountered during the first day through the Mojave Desert. I dehydrated, became electrolyte depleted and ended up in the hospital where they reconstituted me with eight liters of IV fluid! My race across America never made it across California. Just a few hours of inadequate electrolyte and water intake wiped out months of training.You may never bike through the Mojave in summer, but you will encounter debilitating heat and humidity at some point in your training or competition. However, it doesn’t take severe weather stress to prove that electrolytes are as vital to performance as your energy supply. Even when it’s cold outside, and I have a chorus of Nordic skiers to sing “amen” here, you need electrolyte replenishment. Sure, hot weather increases cramping potential, but cramping prevention isn’t the primary reason for electrolyte supplementation. No one wants to cramp, of course, but cramping is a place far down the road of electrolyte depletion. Cramping is your body’s painful way of saying “Hey! I’m on empty! Re-supply me now or I’m going to stop!” Just as you don’t wait until you bonk before you re-fuel, you don’t wait for cramps to remind you to take electrolytes. Electrolytes are analogous to the motor oil in your car – it doesn’t make the engine run, but it’s absolutely necessary to keep everything running smoothly. Proper functioning of the muscular, digestive, nervous, and cardiac systems depend on adequate electrolyte levels. Cramping is like the oil light on the dash; you never want it to get that low. And when you’ve got smoke coming from the engine, as I did in the ’95 RAAM, your race is over and your day is done. In this article, we’ll look closely at this vital, but oft neglected and misunderstood aspect of fueling. I’ll tell you why salt tablets don’t work, and why Endurolytes is unquestionably the finest electrolyte formula you can use. What are Electrolytes? | Why Can't I Just Use Salt Tablets? What are Electrolytes and Why Do I Need Them? Electrolytes are chemicals that form electrically charged particles (ions) in body fluids. These ions carry the electrical energy necessary for many functions, including nerve impulse transmission and muscle contractions. Many normal bodily functions depend on these substances; optimal performance requires a consistent and adequate supply of these important nutrients. Many athletes neglect consistent electrolyte replenishment because they’ve “never had cramping problems.” Even if you’ve been fortunate enough to have never suffered the painful, debilitating effects of cramping, you still need to provide your body with a consistent and adequate supply of electrolytes. Why? Because the goal in replenishing electrolytes is not so much to prevent cramping but to maintain specific bodily functions at optimal levels. Cramping is your body’s way of letting you know that regarding electrolytes, it’s “on empty.” When you’ve reached that point, your performance has been severely compromised for some time. Remember, you want your body to perform smoothly, without interruption or compromise, so just as you don’t wait until you’re dehydrated or bonking before you replenish fluids or calories, you never want to wait until you’re cramping before replenishing electrolytes. As important as the fuel you consume and the water you drink during exercise is a consistent replenishment of electrolytes. Why Can't I Just Use Salt Tablets? Salt tablets are an unacceptable choice for electrolyte replenishment for two reasons: 1. They provide only two of the electrolytes your body requires—sodium and chloride. Each of these issues is important, and we’ll discuss both of them. Right now, let’s focus primarily on the second one. Far too many athletes have suffered needlessly with swollen hands and feet from water retention due to ingestion of salt tablets or electrolyte products too high in sodium during prolonged exercise in the heat. The body has very effective mechanisms to regulate and re-circulate sodium from body stores. Excess sodium consumption interferes with or neutralizes these complex mechanisms. Sweat generates large sodium loss, which is monitored closely through hormonal receptors throughout the body. However, rapid sodium replacement neutralizes the system, allowing water intake to dilute sodium content. High sodium electrolyte supplementation contravenes natural physiological serum electrolyte control. Once the body detects an increase in sodium from exogenous sources (i.e., food, salt tablets, or products too high in sodium), the hormone aldosterone signals the kidneys to stop filtering and re-circulating sodium and instead excrete it. When this happens, another hormone, vasopressin, predominates and causes fluid retention. If you’ve ever finished a workout or race with swollen hands, wrists, feet, or ankles, or if you have experienced puffiness under your eyes and around your cheeks, chances are your sodium/salt intake was too high. The truth is that the human body needs only a minute amount of sodium to function normally. We require a mere 250 mg of sodium each day, athletes maybe 500 mg, which is easily supplied by natural, unprocessed foods. However, the average American consumes approximately 6000 to 7000 mg per day. The average athlete stores at least 8000 mg of dietary sodium in tissues and has these stores available during exercise. In other words, you already have a vast reservoir of sodium available in your body from your diet, ready to serve you during exercise. In addition, your body has a highly complex and efficient way of monitoring and re-circulating sodium back into the blood, which it does to maintain homeostasis. Yes, you do need to replenish sodium during exercise, but it has to be in amounts that cooperate with and not override these complex body mechanisms. The way to fulfill sodium requirements is not by indiscriminate consumption of salty foods or salt tablets, but rather with a lower-sodium approach that emphasizes a balance of essential minerals that cooperatively enhance the body's natural hormone and enzyme actions. You want a product that contains a moderate supply of sodium, one that will provide necessary electrolyte support without compromising internal regulation. Don't I Need to Replace What I Sweat Out? It’s easy to formulate a product that matches one of the many perspiration analysis studies and then sell it on the basis that athletes simply need to replace what they lose. Some products do just that. Unfortunately, there’s a problem with this because individual sweat-loss differences vary greatly and the human body does not and cannot efficiently replace what it expends during exercise at any intensity above a walking pace. Electrolytes lost are not replaced by electrolytes consumed. The body replaces only 35-45% of what it loses during exercise and this is true for fluids, calories, and electrolytes. If you try to replace all the fluids at once, you may end up with dilutional hyponatremia (overly diluted blood sodium levels) or water-intoxication. If you attempt to replace all the fuel you expend, your stomach will back up in total rebellion, and refueling will grind to a halt. And if you try to replace, in equal amounts, all the electrolytes you lose, a number of hormonal triggers may create all sorts of problems such as gastric distress, edema, muscle spasms, and cramping. Don’t focus on what you lose, but on how much your body can absorb. Endurance nutrition guru Bill Misner, Ph.D., says, “Give it [your body] 35-45%, even though it cries aloud for 110%.” In regards to the amount of fluids you drink, calories you eat, and electrolytes you replenish, this is an important principle to remember. How Should I Replenish Electrolytes? Proper electrolyte replenishment during endurance exercise requires a gradual, consistent approach that incorporates all the electrolytes in amounts that do not override normal body mechanisms. Remember, electrolyte intake needs to be below systemic detection, yet help alleviate systemic depression. This means that you need to consume enough to support body functions and prevent heat-related issues such as cramping without overwhelming your body; electrolyte intake must slip under the body’s “radar detection system” while still providing optimal support. Endurolytes and Endurolytes Powder are full-spectrum electrolyte products designed to fulfill the body’s electrolyte requirements, countering the effects of hypothermia, optimizing specific bodily functions, and enhancing endurance performance, especially beyond the two-hour mark. We do not formulate Endurolytes and Endurolytes Powder to reflect the amounts of electrolyte loss in sweat because each person has a unique biological predisposition in terms of minerals lost via perspiration. Additionally, the differences in an athlete’s size and fitness, as well as the pace of exercise, and of course the humidity and heat, can mean up to a 1000% difference when one athlete’s sweat rate is compared to another’s. A “one size fits all” formula based merely on sweat rates cannot and will not adequately support your specific electrolyte requirements. In the purest sense, the Endurolytes formula is not so much an electrolyte replacement product, but is better described as an “electrolyte stress support formula.” It helps the body perform better under the demands of exercise, especially in heat, by providing a full complement of minerals in the proper balance without interfering with normal body control systems. Endurolytes and Endurolytes Powder work with your body, not against it. Chelated Minerals and Why Endurolytes Contain Them Chelation is the process of bonding a mineral to an amino acid, making the mineral more bioavailable. Chelated minerals are the form most often recommended because they provide greater absorption than their non-chelated counterparts. For example, magnesium is 87% absorbed when chelated, but only 16 % when taken in an inorganic, non-chelated form. One nutrition scientist wrote, “Estimates of normal mineral absorption average 10%; however, absorption of chelated minerals may be as high as 60%.” CALCIUM is the most abundant mineral in the human body (about 2.85 pounds in the average person). Normal heart rhythm, healthy nerve transmission, and strong muscle contractions require a constant blood calcium level. During exercise, calcium-dependent enzymes produce energy from fatty and amino acid conversion. Because fatty acids are such an important fuel during endurance exercise, providing 60-65% of your energy needs when exercise goes beyond two hours in length, having adequate calcium available to efficiently convert them into energy is crucial. When blood calcium runs low, the body extracts it from the bones, but this process can’t keep up with your exercise depletion rate. Serum calcium deficiency during endurance events may produce high blood pressure, muscle cramps, and weakness. 150-300 mg/hr is an adequate dose of calcium to maintain the aforementioned physiological functions. HEED is Hammer Nutrition’s newest fuel, an all-complex carbohydrate powdered sports drink. One of the nice features of HEED is that it contains a complete and easily assimilated electrolyte profile, not just salt and potassium, which is all you get in most other sports drinks. Two scoops of HEED provide the electrolyte equivalent of approximately 1 - 1.25 Endurolytes capsules. Some athletes will find that with a scoop or two of HEED in their water bottle they’re good for well over an hour. For other athletes, the electrolyte profile in HEED will provide an excellent base from which additional Endurolytes capsules can be consumed (or Endurolytes Powder can be added to the mix) to completely satisfy electrolyte needs. Consistent replenishment of fluids and calories is absolutely essential to maintain energy levels during workouts and races. This article has shown you that providing constant replenishment of electrolytes is an equally important component of proper fueling. While getting your fluid and caloric needs dialed in and nailed down is fairly easy to accomplish (especially if you read the related articles in this book), properly fulfilling your electrolyte needs can be a bit more challenging because it’s an ever-changing process, dependent on several variables. Using Endurolytes or Endurolytes Powder in your training will resolve that challenge. They contain the right minerals in the right balance, and because they are independent of your caloric and hydration sources, they provide you with the necessary dosage flexibility. Regardless of your size, sport, training intensity, fitness level, or the weather, you can fulfill your electrolytes needs accurately and precisely with Endurolytes or Endurolytes Powder. Steve Born, Technical Advisor Steve Born is a technical advisor for E-CAPS with over a decade of involvement in the health food industry. He is a three-time RAAM finisher, the 1994 Furnace Creek 508 Champion, 1999 runner-up, the only cyclist in history to complete a Double Furnace Creek 508, and is the holder of two Ultra Marathon Cycling records. In February, 2004 Steve was inducted into the Ultra Marathon Cycling Hall of Fame. © 2005, Endurance Marketing Group. This information is copyright protected. Please feel free to distribute this information as long as this copyright notice and EMG's phone number and/or URL are included. Content must remain unchanged and original authorship acknowledged. |
||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||