Eating For Exercise

July 24, 2010 by Noel Ireland  
Filed under Exercises

The whole purpose of exercise is to stay healthy and fit. In addition, you realize that you

have to eat healthy so you will have the energy your body needs for exercise and

accomplishing the daily activities in your life. To have the best exercise experience, the

food you consume prior to and following a workout is extremely important.

Regardless of whether you’re going to do a cardio workout or a resistance workout, you must

always be sure to eat a balanced amount of protein and carbohydrates. Depending on what

types of exercises you are doing and how hard you are working out is the determining factor

on how many carbs and how much protein you should eat.

One hour prior to beginning exercise is the best time for consumption of your pre workout

meal. If you intend to have a low-level intensity workout, you should eat approximately 200

calories before you exercise. When your exercise routine is going to be very intense, it is

best in most cases to consume 4 to 5 thousand calories beforehand.

For those of you who will be performing a cardio session, you’ll require a combination of

2/3 carbohydrates and 1/3 protein. By doing this, your sustained energy will be longer due

to the additional carbs with sufficient protein to keep your muscle from breaking down as

you work out.

For a resistance workout, you should consume a combination of 1/3 carbohydrates and 2/3

protein, as this will ensure that you have sufficient energy from the carbohydrates to do

each set, with the additional protein to keep muscle breakdown low as you exercise.

Having something to eat following exercise is as crucial as eating prior to a workout.

Whenever you perform any exercise, cardio or resistance, your energy/glycogen levels are

exhausted. Glycogen is the most important fuel for the brain and associated components; if

it’s not replaced after exercise, the body starts to consume muscle tissue to make amino

acids into a replacement fuel.

The tissue of muscles will be broken down by micro tear creation during resistance exercise.

This indicates that following a workout, your muscles start repairing themselves instantly.

Protein is crucial here for muscle repair, since you do not want muscle breaking down any

more to make fuel rather than lost glycogen.

As soon as you’re done with a cardio session, you have to have mostly carbohydrates, ideally

ones that are high in fiber. Great sources are oatmeal, pasta made with whole wheat, fruits

from the north, and rice. In addition, try to eat 30 to 50 grams of these kinds of

carbohydrates following exercise. Following some cardio exercise, you can consume food in a

short period of time.

After performing resistance exercises, it is important to eat a mixture of carbohydrates and

proteins. Being different from cardiovascular workouts, resistance exercise will cause

muscle break down by making little tears.

To increase the strength and size of the muscle, protein to repair and build up the tears is

a necessary requirement. The carbohydrates won’t just replace the lost muscle glycogen, they

also will help the protein get into muscle cells where it will synthesize into structural

protein, or the actual muscle itself.

Following your resistance exercise, you ought to postpone eating for about thirty minutes,

so that you won’t draw blood away from your muscles too rapidly. Your muscles will begin

healing themselves if the blood has the opportunity to help the metabolic waste wash away.


As Featured On EzineArticles

Comments

5 Responses to “Eating For Exercise”
  1. Cardio workout is always great if you want to cut down those fats:,.

  2. It’ s the first time I have heard that in Macedonia, obits are an unusual observe. You have wonderfully written the post. I have liked your way of writing this. Thanks for sharing this.

  3. tava tea says:

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