Week 3 - carbohydrates after exercise Flashcards

1
Q

How does cho ingestion change between short term intervals beteen training/rounds of competition (0-8h) and Long term (8-24h)

A

Long term – 8-24 hours between training sessions/rounds of competition – adoption of general daily CHO intake (week 2) should ensure repletion on day to day basis. Fuelling to meet energy demands.
Short term – 0-8 hours – more specific strategies needed to ensure rapid glycogen repletion. Wont get a full muscle/liver in that time – but want as much carb in them as possible during short time.

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2
Q

How does cho ingestion straight after exercise compare to no cho ingestion straight after exercise on glycogen synthesis?

What athletes should adopt this strategy

A

0-2hr – carbs given post exercise- high rates of glycogen resynthesis.
-0-2hr – no carbs provided -still some recovery of muscle glycogen - glucose in blood can enter muscle and liver can make own glucose – gluconeogenesis provides blood glucose which is available to the muscle. But still a 3fold difference.

Athletes who have less than 8h between training sessions/rounds of competition should adopt this, more aggressive strategy.

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3
Q

How does cho ingestion 2-4h after exercise compare to no cho ingestion 2-4h after exercise on glycogen synthesis?

A

Rate of glycogen synthesis is very similar whether you ingested carbs or not

2-4hr – blunting on rate of muscle glycogen resynthesis – glycogen resynthesis is not as great when ingesting carbs 2-4 hours after exercise

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4
Q

What is GLUT4 translocation and what triggers GLUT4 translocation?

A

GLUT 4 moves to muscle cell membrane through GLUT 4 translocation to move glucose into the cell as it is needed as a fuel.
GLUT 4 is signalled to move to membrane via various signals such as the start of exercise
Post exercise recovery - when fed, insulin induced effect where transporters move into cell membrane to have the same effect on glucose

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5
Q

When glucose enters the muscle, what can happen to it?

A

When glucose enters the muscle, can be partitioned off into oxidation for glycolysis or can continue and be kept as glycogen through enzymes glycogen synthase and branching enzyme

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6
Q

What does glycogen synthase do?

A

Glycogen synthase adds glucose molecules to form a long string. (rate limiting)

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7
Q

What does the structure of branching enzyme allow to happen to it?

A

Branching enzyme allows branching in structure – allows joints to be formed between strings of glucose molecules - more access points for enzymes to break it down. Important as it would be needed rapidly.

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8
Q

What is the difference between a-1,4 glycosidic bonds and a-1,6

A

1-4 bonds give glycogen its flat structure and 1-6 bonds allow branching

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9
Q

What are the 2 phases of muscle glycogen recovery post ex?

A

Rapid phase – insulin independent – approx. first 1-2 hours after exercise completes – occurs independently of insulin. Glut 4 transporters are remaining on cell membrane during this 1-2hours – window of opportunity.
Slow phase – insulin dependent – 2hours+ - slow phase even with carbohydrate ingestion

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10
Q

During ex, what does muscle contraction cause?

A

Ca2+ release
Production of NO
Activation of AMPK

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11
Q

During ex, muscle contraction sends positive and negative signals towards certain enzymes/processes in order to provide ATP. What are these?

A

Muscle contraction causes GLUT4 translocation, bringing glucose into the cell, also a positive impact on glycolysis, ), an inhibition on glycogen synthase (don’t want any glucose to be portioned towards storage – needed to provide ATP as muscle is contracting – during exercise)

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12
Q

When exercise finishes, what happens to these signals that were active during ex?

A

When exercise finishes, removal of these signals over time – removal of inhibition of GS, and removal of glycolysis signal – any glucose entering cell can be portioned towards storage. Some GLUT 4 remains in membrane for an hour ish. Insulin independent.

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13
Q

What is the key cause, post exercise, to get glucose into the cell

A

Insulin

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14
Q

Post ex, when eating, insulin has 2 signals with the aim to store glucose. What are these?

A

Eating a meal – insulin released into circulation through pancreas sensing. Insulin binds with receptors on cell membrane. Insulin has positive effect on GS to cause glycogen synthesis and a signal to move GLUT 4 to membrane. Now partitioning our available glucose in its storage depot – glycogen. Different signal from insulin moves glut4 to membrane to allow more glucose in.

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15
Q

When is the optimum, window of opportunity to maximise rate of glycogen synthesis (for athletes who have short amount of time between training/rounds of comp?

A

The first hour after exercise completion.

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16
Q

Why is fructose absorbed slower than glucose and sucrose

A

Fructose primarily metabolised in liver, (slower process) where as glucose and sucrose handled by muscle without prior metabolism in liver needed.

17
Q

What do carbohydrate rich foods with a moderate to high glycaemic index provide

And what carbs fit this index and what carbs dont

A

Carbohydrate rich foods with a moderate to high glycaemic index provide a radily available source of substrate for glycogen synthesis. This may be important when maximum glycogen storage is required in the hours after an exercise bout.
High glyceamic foods – glucose. Sucrose would be moderate (fits within guidelines above) Fructose would be lower on the glycaemic index despite being a monoscahhride.

18
Q

What is the science behind protein co-ingestion with carbs?

A

Added benefit of protein co ingested with cho only occurs with low cho ingesting rates – anything lower than 1.2 g/kg/h
Mechanism – benefits of protein causes stimulatory/direct effect on insulin. Insulin stimulates glycogen synthase and glut 4 translocation to bring glucose into the cell.

19
Q

What are the perfect guidelines for cho feeding post exercise (over 4 hours post ex)
(for speedy refuelling post ex)

A

-Early and frequent carbohydrate feeding e.g. within the first hour and at 30min intervals for 4h thereafter, before resuming normal diet.
-1.2g/kg CHO/h for first 4 hours, of mod-to-high glycaemic index CHOs
-addition of protein if cho intake is sub-optimal

20
Q

New studies were done on the muscle and liver glycogen synthesis rates when fructose-glucose was ingested compared to glucose. What was found?

A

Synthesis rate for muscle glycogen was the same for glucose ingested and fructose-glucose ingested.
Follow up study looked at liver – found that storage rate increased with fructose-glucose ingestion – addition of fructose to glucose doubled rate of resynthesis in the liver than just glucose

Muscle – storage of MG is the same with sucrose (glucose and fructose) and glucose
Liver glycogen replenishment higher with frucrose-glucose (sucrose) – provision of G-F is better than glucose alone.

21
Q

What is sucrose?

A

Fructose and glucose

22
Q
A