BrianMac Sports Coach Presents…

 

Nutritional Supplements For Athletes

New evidence-based research every committed sports player should know about


Serious athletes don’t need reminding of the importance of adequate nutrition.

“Congratulations Peak Performance: you are the one-stop-shopping link for developing complete athletes.” Werner Lamberts, Coach.

What they do need is reliable, unbiased and up-to-date information on dietary Best Practice – particularly nutritional supplements, a subject on which it’s rare to find independent, evidence-based advice.

 Taking the wrong supplements is not just an unnecessary expense. It can actually undermine your performance – and even damage your long-term health.

That’s why I’m pleased to announce the latest addition to Sports Injury Bulletin's library of sports books, Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance. This timely guide for serious athletes is written by Peak Performance’s resident nutrition guru, Andrew Hamilton.

And I’m making it available to you today at a special online discount. (See below for details.)

In this 95-page workbook Andy dissects the major current debates in sports nutrition, analyses the very latest scientific findings – then spells out in plain English their significance for the serious athlete. Every page of this brand new report draws on the latest evidence-based thinking in sports science research – new findings that probably won’t percolate through to the general sporting press for many, many months, if they make it at all…

It’s a rare opportunity to assess the latest sports nutrition thinking for yourself, and decide how best to integrate it into your training and conditioning.

Read our brand new report today and here are some of the facts you’ll learn:

What’s more, postage & packing is free. And you’ve got 30 days to decide whether or not you want to keep the book or return it for a full refund.

Yours sincerely

Sylvester Stein

Chairman: Sports Injury Bulletin

Click here to go to our special discount offer, or read on to learn more about Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance

Iron Deficiency and Anaemia in Athletes – why blood tests often fail to detect this common problem

Most athletes know that iron is a mineral required for the formation of the red blood cells used to transport oxygen to hard-working muscles. And that insufficient iron causes anaemia, which is characterised by fatigue, listlessness and a general lack of energy.

They also know that a proper diet aimed at maintaining iron status, and checking red blood cell or haemoglobin (Hb) levels, are vital for peak performance.

However, most athletes are far less aware of the fact that iron is one of the most difficult minerals to absorb, and that sports players are especially vulnerable to iron depletion through training-induced losses, especially if their event involves endurance work.

To make matters worse, the latest ways of measuring iron indicate that that it is perfectly possible to have a healthy blood Hb count while at the same time suffering from depleted levels of tissue iron. And, if that weren’t enough, recent research has demonstrated that this tissue iron depletion impairs the ability of the body to adapt to endurance training.  

In Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance we address the central question of how to accurately identify the problem of anaemia. Recent studies show that conventional blood tests may be inadequate measures of iron status. Consequently, athletes may be iron deficient at a cellular level – unknown to them, their coaches or even their medical advisors.  

We report on a new US study that looks at the implications of tissue iron deficiency for both sports performance and post-training adaptations.  

And we reveal a NEW marker of iron status that is a more accurate indicator of iron levels in athletes than the blood tests doctors typically prescribe.  

We also set out several easy steps you can take to maintain an optimum iron status – and we explain why swallowing iron supplements in tablet or capsule form could do you more harm than good.  

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A New Nutritional Supplement to rival Creatine?

Did you know there’s a dietary substance containing a mixture of amino acids and ketoacids that looks set to challenge creatine’s position as the supplement of choice among strength-power athletes? Now you can read all about this promising newcomer in Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance.

Unlike creatine, which requires approximately 5 days of loading to produce improvements in high-intensity work, this rival supplement appears to have an ergogenic effect within minutes of consumption.

We give details of a recent American research project in which track cyclists were engaged in repeated bouts of anaerobic exercise after having taken a dose of the test nutrient. They were able to perform at a higher work output, and also noted a significant delay in the onset of muscle fatigue.

Scientists are now considering whether the effects of this nutrient might be further enhanced by its being given in combination with creatine.

Essential Fatty Acids – the secret of conserving carbohydrate while shedding excess mass

Nature or nurture? There is an age-old debate about whether performance is primarily ‘in your genes’ or develops in response to training. The common consensus is somewhere in-between: we inherit a set of genes that determine our potential, but it’s our training and nutrition that allow us to reach that potential.

New evidence suggests this fatalistic approach to our genetic make-up is misplaced. Fascinating research is emerging from the world of nutrition to suggest that essential fats in our diet can exert significant control over key metabolic genes in our cells, particularly those involved with fat storage, fat burning and glycogen synthesis.

In plain English this means that, while you might not be born with the ideal genetic make-up for your chosen sport or event, correct fatty acid nutrition could help to ‘reprogramme’ your genetic code!

There are two principal essential fats: alpha-linolenic acid (sometimes called omega-3) and linoleic acid (omega-6). These two fats are ‘essential’ because their chemical structure means that they can be used to make hormone-like substances called prostaglandins, which go on to regulate a host of other functions in the body.

However, these fats cannot be synthesised by the body, which is why we rely on getting them ‘ready-made’ from the diet.

Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance reports on several studies that examine the central role of essential fatty acids (EFAs) in enhancing thermogenesis (the burning of excess fat to produce heat), thereby assisting the body in losing weight – just what most athletes are after!

And we reveal the best food sources of EFAs, along with the current dietary recommendations on daily calorie intake of EFAs for optimum health.

Of course, some athletes will want to use supplements to boost their dietary intake of EFAs. So we also set out current Best Practice in this area, particularly the specific storage requirements that apply to EFAs because of their chemical fragility.

Finally, we explain why you would do well to avoid off-the-shelf seed oil or fish oil supplements in your quest for an adequate daily EFA intake.

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Two new dietary supplements that could be the ‘Holy Grail’ for master athletes and other competitors

There has been a recent explosion of scientific interest in two hitherto-overlooked dietary supplements, with a large number of studies now underway on humans.

The first is a sulphur-containing nutrient that, because it is readily soluble in water and fat, is able to work effectively in almost any part of the body, including the brain. In the mitochondria, this nutrient can act both as an antioxidant, capable of recycling other antioxidant nutrients such as vitamin C and vitamin E, and as a coenzyme for key metabolic enzymes involved in energy production.

In addition to its role as an antioxidant, this nutrient also raises the levels within cells of a substance called glutathione, which is critical for neural function, and aids in glycolysis, the first stages of breaking down carbohydrates for energy.

The second substance carries fatty acids from the cytosol (the main body of the cell) into the mitochondria (the energy-producing furnaces within cells) so that these fats can be oxidised for energy. It is also involved in the production of the key brain neurotransmitter acetylcholine, and is able to donate its acetyl group in a number of other biochemical reactions.

Why all the scientific excitement over these two substances?

In a nutshell, it’s their potential to seriously improve sports performance.

Preliminary research on lab rats indicated that these two under-researched supplements, when taken together, can significantly reduce exercise-induced oxidative stress in athletes and others.

We should emphasise that the scientific research on humans is still at an early stage, and most of the available evidence relates to studies on lab animals and racehorses. However, preliminary results on human subjects look very promising.

If you are tempted to ‘jump the scientific gun’ and supplement these nutrients anyway, the good news is that they appear to be relatively non-toxic, even at very high doses.

The only caveat is that one of these two supplements, when taken in high doses, is known to enhance sensitivity to insulin, which could lead to a drop in blood sugar. For this reason, it should be taken with food.

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Antioxidant Vitamins – can they actually be bad for you?

Oxygen. It’s amazing stuff. Thanks to its special chemical reactivity, it provides us with the energy required to sustain life, including the ability to power movements and muscular contraction.

However, the oxygen molecule is a double-edged sword. For this same chemical reactivity can also wreak cellular havoc by means of the free radicals that are produced unavoidably as a consequence of harnessing the chemical energy of oxygen within the body. The damage created by free radicals is now thought to be one of the root causes of degenerative diseases, inflammation and the ageing process in general.

In recent years, there has been much speculation that athletes, who not only consume more oxygen than others to fuel their training but also frequently train at or near their maximum oxygen uptakes, might be at increased risk of free radical-induced damage, or ‘oxidative stress’.

That’s because athletes don’t just process a larger volume of oxygen than their sedentary counterparts – they also process it at a higher rate. During training, the rate of oxygen processing by the mitochondria can rise by a factor of 20, placing exceptionally high demands on antioxidant defence systems.

The fact that free radical generation does increase during vigorous exercise is no longer in doubt. However, there’s still considerable confusion about the implications of this increased free radical generation.

In Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance we report on recent sports science research findings that clarify the role of anti-oxidant nutrients in combating the effects of intensive exercise regimes. The research shows which nutrients have a positive effect – and how best to take these supplements.

Importantly, a new study reports that some antioxidant nutrients, far from being synergistic, may actually work against one another. We identify these antioxidants for you and tell you how best to integrate them into your daily nutrition regime.

Moreover, we report that certain vitamins, commonly taken for anti-oxidant purposes, actually appear to worsen the situation by promoting cellular damage when taken in high doses. You’ll find out which vitamins to watch out for, and what are the recommended doses.

Finally, we examine the role that a fruit and vegetable-rich diet can play in combating free radicals – and, crucially, how to tell if a particular fruit or vegetable is high in antioxidants.

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How to Bolster Your Body’s Natural Immunity – we dispel some of the myths

Athletes constantly live on a knife-edge between overreaching and overtraining. That new programme might shed valuable seconds off your PB, but if it proves too much and you come down with a viral infection you stand to lose fitness, not gain it.

Building and maintaining immunity should be thought of as a vital part of any athlete’s programme, particularly as the existence of post-exercise immuno-suppression is now well established. But what can athletes do to maximise their immunity and reduce the risk of infection and illness?

Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance provides a timely, evidence-based reassessment of some of the most popular dietary supplements for athletes.

Take, for example, a well-known (and costly) amino acid supplement that is widely consumed by endurance athletes. New research findings conclude that this is not the ‘magic bullet’ athletes had hoped it might be.

We also put a popular herbal remedy under the microscope, reporting on several recent studies that indicate this substance does not reduce the incidence of upper respiratory tract infections.

We also report new findings on the effects of probiotics on post-exercise immuno-suppression, and identify several practical, no-cost dietary and lifestyle steps you can take to boost and maintain your immunity.

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Details of your early bird discount offer

As a Sports Injury Bulletin reader, you qualify for an online discount copy of Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance. Place your order today and you pay just $39.99 (£19.99) instead of the full price of US$59.99 (£29.99). You save 33%.

This book is not available elsewhere.

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Nutritional Supplements – Boosting Your Performance is published by Electric Word plc, publishers of the Peak Performance newsletter, Sports Injury Bulletin and Successful Coaching.

“I have been so impressed that I have asked the Librarian of our National Sports Institute to place an ongoing order for not only Peak Performance and Sports Injury Bulletin but also all of the titles currently on your list.” - Robert Morford, National Sports Institute, Malaysia

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