Archive for the 'Nutrition' Category

Off Season workouts

It would be to your benefit to take advantage of the month you have off during your winter break to stay fit and ready to go for the spring season.  A great way to do this, is to stay active for at least 4-5 days a week for 40-90 minutes at a time.  These activities can vary from soccer drills to leisurely activities such as biking, swimming, running, or playing basketball.  If you have access to a gym, engaging in light weight activities can give you a competitive advantage, but if not, doing the body weight activities (listed below), you can remain in shape. 

An average week might consist of 2 days of weight training or body weight circuits/conditioning and the other 2 days longer aerobic activities with soccer sprints in between (interval running).

It is very important to run at least 3 times a week, whether it be to work on sprints (10’s to 100’s) or longer endurance runs (1.5 miles, 1 mile, 800’s, 400’s, 200’s)

Circuit:

Always conduct a warm up before beginning any workout and a cool down after.

Body Weight Squat- 20 times

Single Leg Squat- 15 times each leg

Pull Up/ Reverse Pull Up- 10/15 time

Walk Out Push Ups- 10 times

Dips- 10 times

Single Leg RDL (body weight)- 15 each leg

Sit Ups- 20

Alternate Arm to Alternate Straight Leg (Ab work)- 20

Sit Ups- 20

Body Weight Squat- 20

Reach Crunch- 20

Move through the circuit three times with a good tempo and correct form

Overall, the emphasis of the winter workout is not on what you specifically do, but making sure you are staying active 4-5 days.  By this point, you should know your body and know how to take care of it.  Make sure you allow the needed recovery time, but at the same time continuously push yourself to become a top notch Division 1 athlete.

 

*LIFT US TO GREATNESS, RUN TO GLORY!*

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Power Eating: The Right Way to Gain Strength

By: Susan M. Kleiner, PhD, RD, FACN, CNS, FISSN

Think about how you would like to look and feel. Imagine yourself with a body that’s fit and firm, with just the right amount of muscle. Imagine the joy of having high strength and energy day in and day out.

Keep those images in your mind’s eye. Those goals are not just for athletes and bodybuilders any more. The field of sports nutrition is light years from the dieting world, but it’s sports nutrition and strength training that makes athletes look and feel great. POWER EATING will show you how to achieve those goals by taking a few nips and tucks in one of the most important fitness factors of all-nutrition.

PRINCIPLES FOR BUILDING MUSCLE, GAINING ENERGY, LOSING FAT

These principles are the same ones I have advocated for world-class athletes, Olympic contenders, and recreational strength trainers for more than 15 years. Now you can do it too.

  • 1. Eat enough calories

A key to feeling energized is to eat the right amount of calories to power your body for hard training. A lack of calories will definitely make you feel like a wet dishrag by the end of your workout. A diet that provides less than 1,600 calories, for example, generally does not contain all the vitamins and minerals you need to stay healthy, prevent disease, and  perform well. Very low-calorie diets followed for longer than two weeks can be hazardous to your health, and they do not provide the dietary reference intakes (DRIs) of enough of the nutrients needed for good health.

Historically, the recommended dietary allowances (RDAs) were the national standard for the amount of carbohydrate, protein, fat, vitamins, and minerals we need in our diets to avoid deficiency diseases and to maintain growth and health. The DRIs were established to update the RDAs abased on more functional criteria rather than criteria based on deficiency diseases. Rather than focusing on avoiding disease, the DRIs focus on optimal performance both mentally and physically. But under certain conditions-stress, illness, malnutrition, and exercise-we may require a higher intake of certain nutrients. Studies have shown that athletes, in particular, may have to exceed the DRI of many nutrients. Some competitive bodybuilders have estimated their calorie intake to be greater than 6,000 calories a day during the off-season-roughly three times the DRI for the average person (2,000 calories a day for women and 2,700 calories a day for men).

How much you need of each nutrient depends on a number of factors including your age and sex, how hard you train, and whether you are a competitive or recreational strength trainer, among other considerations. Calorie needs for an athlete trying to build strength and muscle can range from 19 to 24 or more calories per pound of body weight for men and 16 to 23 or more calories per pounds of body weight for women. If you are trying to lose fat, then calorie needs will vary.

Generally strength trainers need to eat more protein, more of the right kinds of carbohydrates, and more high performance fats. What’s more, they may be wise to supplement with a one-a-day style multivitamin-mineral supplement. If you are trying to gain muscle and lose body fat, eating enough calories and takin gin enough nutrients will make the difference between success failure.

  • 2. Eat the carbohydrate you need.

It’s well known that most athletes, strength trainers, included, don’t eat enough carbohydrate, the primary fuel for the body. Most athletes eat diets in which only half the total daily calories come from carbohydrate, but if you want to build muscle you need to eat 2.1 to 3.2 grams of carbohydrate per pound of body weight per day. Men eat more than women. That’s more than half of your total daily calorie intake. Some athletes think that they should be following a low-carbohydrate diet because it promotes faster weight loss. The problem with these diets is that they deplete glycogen, the body’s storage form of carbohydrate. Once glycogen stores are emptied, the body starts burning protein from tissues, including muscle tissue, to meet its energy demands. You lose hard-earned muscle as a result.

The real story on carbohydrate for weight control and muscle building is that you should select whole-food carbohydrate-natural, complex carbohydrate as close to its natural state as possible-instead of refined, processed carbohydrate. What’s the difference? A blueberry is a whole-food carbohydrate: a blueberry toaster muffin is a processed carbohydrate.

One important reason why whole foods are better has to do with their high-fiber content.Fiber is the remnant of plant foods that remains undigested by the body. It’s what keeps your bowel movements regular. Fiber is also a proven fat fighter. Research shows that people who eat healthy high-fiber diets have smaller waistlines, and are able to better control their weight. The bottom line is that the right types of carbohydrate can help you manage your weight successfully. The only types of carbohydrate you should shy away from are sugars and highly processed foods. Even so, when used in a targeted way, sugars can be an athlete’s best friend by providing the right fuel at the right time. But without a plan, they can sabotage your goals.

  • 3. Vary your diet

One of the biggest downfalls of traditional bodybuilding diets is the monotonous food choices. Little fruit, fewer vegetables, even less dairy, and little to no meat or eggs show up on their plates. Fruits and vegetables are packed with disease-fighting, health-building antioxidants and phytochemicals that make all the difference when you’re trying to gain energy and build muscle. Dairy products supply important nutrients like bone-building calcium and whey, the ideal muscle-building protein. Meat and eggs are important sources of vital minerals like iron and zinc, without which you’ll be jumping lower and running slower.

Bodybuilders, however, do a lot of things right, especially during the training season. They eat several meals and snacks throughout the day-a practice that should be followed by everyone. In fact, you should be fueling your active body every two and a half to four hours. Carrying snacks with you from a wide variety of the food groups like nuts, fresh and dried fruit, mozzarella cheese sticks, yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, turkey jerky, soy nuts and crisps, are a great way to ensure variety in your diet all day long. Make meals representative of all the food groups by including fruits, vegetables, dairy, whole grains, beans, soy, eggs, fish, chicken, meats, nuts, nut butters and oils, olives and extra virgin olive oil, and avocados. Choose a variety of foods from within the food groups as well. Don’t just eat apples, eat apples, bananas, grapes, berries, peaches, nectarines, oranges, grapefruit, and all the wonderful variety of fruits available during the week and month. Keep the idea the same for vegetables, grains, protein foods and high performance fats.

  • 4. Time and combine your food and nutrients

To achieve superb shape and maximum performance, forgo the usual approach of three meals a day. Active people must fuel themselves throughout the day, eating small meals and snacks every two and a half to four hours, preferable timed around their workout schedule As we’ll see, these meals don’t include just any type of food.

When eating multiple meals, you always want to combine protein with carbohydrate and high performance fat. Examples would be a turkey sandwich, a whole-wheat bage with peanut butter, or an apple with nuts. Eating multiple meals also promotes variety in your diet and keeps your blood sugar levels even so that you avoid peaks and valley throughout the (a cycle that happens to promote fat storage).

By including small amounts of protein in meals and snacks, you can control your appetite, feed your muscles more efficiently, and maintain muscle even when you’re trying to lose fat.  You also burn fat better because protein, as well as eating multiple small meals, has been shown to increase thermogenesis, the process b which your body converts ingested calories and stored fat into heat. Another advantage of multiple meals is mental performance. regular, timed meals help you think and process information more effectively, increase your attention span, and boost your mood.

The bottom line is that small, frequent meals throughout the day are the best fat-burning, muscle-building strategy you can integrate into your lifestyle. It might be hard during the school day, but if you carry snacks in your backpack or book bag it will make all the difference in your performance on the field, and in the classroom.

  • 5. Use a food plan

Any nutritional program aimed at losing body fat and building muscle should be based on a food plan that emphasizes lean protein, natural carbohydrate, and high performance fat. When you want to achieve great things, you have to have a plan, and stick with it. You, along with someone close to you, need to think about the four, four-letter words of nutrition: plan, shop, pack and cook. Without planning ahead, you leave yourself at the mercy of whatever is around when you’re hungry: fast food and vending machines. These will sabotage your results every time.

Think about what you need to eat to fuel your body and your brain. Make a shopping list. Go shopping: read labels while you’re there to make sure that what you are buying is the real deal. Shop the perimeter of the supermarket where most of the fresh foods and only lightly processed foods (think bread, cheese) can be found. The closer you get to the center of the store, the more processed the foods become. Make sure to purchase foods that can be packed, and have packing supplies on hand to make your mornings efficient. Get involved with dinner decisions, and even recipe choices. It won’t be that long before you’ll have to be doing this for yourself in your own home. And you may have a positive influence on your whole family’s diet.

Table 1.           Power Eating® Timing

Throughout the day

Fluids: At least 8-12 cups a day; at least 5 cups should be water.
Breakfast: Never skip this meal, because it improves physical and mental performance and helps regulate weight.
Meals: Small, frequent protein/carbohydrate/high performance fat meals and snacks every 2 to 4 h.

Before exercise

Fluids: At least 8 oz. before exercise.
Pre-exercise meal: At least 4 h before exercise so that the body properly assimilates carbohydrates for use by muscles.
Pre-exercise snack: 30 to 90 min before exercise. Snack should include 200 to 400 calories, 30 to 50 grams of carb, 10 to 20 grams of proteins, and 5 to 7 grams of fat. Snack can be food or meal-replacement supplements. These will provide additional energy for prolonged stamina and help decrease exercise-induced breakdown of muscle protein.

During exercise

Fluids: 7-10 oz. every 10-20 min.
Glucose-electrolyte sport drinks: Sipping these during a workout has been shown to extend endurance. Use when trying to build muscle, and don’t use when trying to lose fat.

After exercise

Fluids: Replace each pound of fluid lost with 16-24 oz. of water or sport drink.
Carbohydrates: Consume .5 to 1.0 g/kg depending on what phase you’re in.
Protein: Consume 0.5 g/kg protein with carbohydrate to encourage muscle growth. Postexercise snacks can be in the form of meal-replacement beverages with .5 to 1.0 grams/kg simple carb and .5 grams protein. Follow this by a meal within 2 h of exercise containing lots of carbohydrate and high-quality protein sources (fish, lean meats, low-fat dairy products, eggs, etc.).

Source for article:

Kleiner SM, Greenwood-Robinson M. Power Eating, Third Edition. Human Kinetics, Champaign, IL. 2007.

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Vegetarian Diets: Perfect Prescription for Athletes

 
icon for podpress  Health Concerns of a Vegitarian [3:00m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download
You’ve decided to make the switch to some style of a vegetarian diet. Will your exercise performance suffer? What about your energy levels? Can you still develop body-firming muscle even though you’re not eating animal protein?

Put your fears aside. Vegetarian diets are typically rich in carbohydrates, with plenty of protein and high performance fats. That’s the perfect prescription for exercisers and athletes. With 60 percent of your diet coming from carb-packed grains, beans, fruits and vegetables, there’s no way your performance will drop off. And you can certainly get enough protein to pack on plenty of muscle. But you do have to plan your diet well.

And just for clarity-sake, although research has taught us that eating too much of animal-based foods may result in the development of chronic diseases like heart disease and cancer, the problem is not that eating any amount of these foods is bad for you. But if you make animal foods the center of your diet, you just don’t have enough room left to eat all the fabulous plant foods like grains, beans, nuts, seeds, fruits and vegetables necessary to ward off disease.

During the past decade millions of Americans have switched to a vegetarian style of eating. Their vegetarian diets fall within a large range of eating styles. So now you have a decision to make: what type of vegetarian do you want to be?
  • Pesco-vegetarians eat dairy foods, eggs and fish, but no other animal flesh.
  • Lacto-ovo-vegetarians eat dairy foods and eggs, but exclude animal flesh.
  • Ovo-vegetarians eat eggs but no dairy foods or animal flesh.
  • Vegans eat no animal foods of any typeAny of these styles will offer you the opportunity to expand the amount of plant foods in your diet and still meet your own desires for food, taste and performance.
  • ENSURING THE PROPER NUTRIENTS

    Changing from a meat-centered to a plant-centered diet is not as simple as just eliminating the meat. The trick is to make sure you’re not skimping on any nutrients as you cut out certain foods. Vegans run the greatest risk of deficiencies because several vital nutrients including protein, vitamins B12 and D, iron, zinc, and calcium, are found in highest qualities or most significant amounts primarily in meat, eggs and dairy products.

    SPECIAL FOCUS ON PROTEIN AND CARBOHYDRATE

    Even women need to eat enough protein. The guys have this part down, but women have not focused on protein needs. When you are training your protein requirement is just the same as his, so join in on the protein fun. Protein is required not only for the maintenance, replacement, and growth of body tissues, but it is used to make the hormones that regulate your metabolism, maintain the body’s water balance, protect against disease, transport nutrients in and out of cells, carry oxygen and regulate blood clotting. If you don’t eat enough high quality protein during training you just won’t achieve your sculpting goals. And when you are not eating any animal sources of protein, you need to eat about 10 percent more protein to cover the variation in the quality of protein from only plant sources (see sidebar).

    When it comes to carbohydrates, don’t be misled by fads. The research is clear: if you want to train hard and long, you need plenty of carbohydrate to achieve your goals. Eating a vegetarian-style diet will make this easy. Plant-based foods are great sources of all the different carbohydrates and fibers that will keep you healthy and fuel intense workouts.

    PLANNING YOUR DIET

    To get enough calories and nutrients, vegetarians should eat at least 1,800 calories a day. The following list gives you minimum servings for each day, with a suggestion of where to add more to increase calories.

    Almost-vegetarians, pesco-vegetarians, and lacto-ovo vegetarians:

  • 6-11 servings of bread, cereal, rice, and pasta
  • 3-5 servings of vegetables
  • 2-4 servings of fruit
  • 2-3 servings of milk, yogurt, and cheese
  • 3-4 servings of poultry, fish, dried beans, eggs, and nuts
  • 3-5 servings of nuts, seeds and other high performance fats
  • Lacto-vegetarians:

  • 8-11 servings of bread, cereal, rice, and pasta
  • 3-5 servings of vegetables
  • 3-4 servings of fruit
  • 2-3 servings of milk and yogurt
  • 1-2 servings of low-fat cheese
  • 4-6 servings of dried beans and peas
  • 3-5 servings of nuts, seeds and other high performance fats
  • supplement or use products fortified with iron and zinc
  • Vegans:

  • 8-11 servings of bread, cereal, rice, and pasta
  • 4-6 servings of vegetables
  • 3-4 servings of fruit
  • 6-8 servings of dried beans and peas
  • 3-5 servings of nuts, seeds and other high performance fats
  • supplement or use products fortified with vitamins B12 and D, iron, zinc, and calcium
  • Serving size guidelines:

    Food Group Serving size
    Whole grain bread, cereals, and grains 1 slice bread; 1/2 cup cooked cereal, rice, or pasta; 1 ounce ready-to-eat cereal; 1/2 bun, bagel, or English muffin; 1 small roll, biscuit, or muffin; 3 to 4 small or large crackers
    Vegetables 1/2 cup cooked or chopped raw vegetables; 1 cup raw, leafy vegetables, 1/2 cup cooked legumes; 3/4 cup vegetable juice
    Fruit 1 medium piece of raw fruit, 1/2 grapefruit, 1 melon wedge, 1/2 cup berries, 1/2 cup diced, cooked or canned fruit, 1/4 cup dried fruit, 3/4 cup of fruit juice
    Milk 1 cup nonfat or lowfat milk or yogurt, or kefir
    Meat, poultry, fish, eggs, cheese, beans 1 oz. cooked lean meat, poultry, or fish, 1 egg, 1/2 ounce cheese, 1/2 cup of cottage cheese 1/2 cup cooked cooked dried beans
    High Performance Fats 1 tsp extra virgin olive oil, canola oil, sesame oil, peanut oil or other nut oil; 1/4 of a small avocado; 8 large olives; 1 Tbsp seeds; 6-8 nuts; 1 Tbsp natural peanut butter

    A GOLD MEDAL LIFETIME

    You are now on the road to improving your performance, and your life. Many successful athletes have chosen a vegetarian lifestyle. Not only could they perform at peak levels during their athletic careers, but they have maintained good health and longevity throughout the rest of their lives.

    SIDEBAR

    DETERMINING PROTEIN QUALITY

    The quality of protein is generally classified in one of two ways. The traditional method, called the Protein Efficiency Ratio (PER), determines the weight gain of growing rats fed a particular protein in comparison to a standard protein (egg whites). The higher the PER value the better the protein. The more contemporary method compares the amino acid profile of a protein to the essential amino acid requirements in humans established by The Food and Agriculture Organization. This method, known as the protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (PDCAAS), is recognized internationally as the best method of comparing proteins for humans. A protein with a PDCAAS of 1.0 indicates that the protein exceeds the essential amino acid requirements of the body and are excellent sources of protein.

    Approximate protein quality of various forms of protein found in food and supplements.*

    Protein PDCAAS PER
    Gelatin (Collagen) 0.08 -
    Wheat 0.43 1.5
    Beef/Poultry/Fish 0.8 – 0.92 2.0 – 2.3
    Soy 1.0 1.8 – 2.3
    Ovalbumin (Egg) 1.00 2.8
    Milk Protein 1.00 2.8
    Casein 1.00 2.9
    Bovine Colostrum (BC) 1.0 3.0
    Whey 1.0 3.0-3.2

    *Data compiled by Dr. Richard Kreider, University of Memphis, Memphis, Tennessee

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    Interview with a University of Miami Senior soccer player

    ,
    ATH-LETE: (noun) A person possessing the natural or acquired traits, such as strength, agility, and endurance that are necessary for physical exercise or sports, especially those performed in competitive contexts.

    Interview with Akilah Moore, University of Miami Finance Major, Division 1 Soccer Player (AtlanticCoast Conference)

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    Water: The Nutrient for Life

     
    icon for podpress  Susan Kleiner of Water [13:39m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download

    Proteins, carbs, vitamins, minerals, water, and fats. Of the 6 primary classes of nutrients, which is the most critical for growth, muscle development, and health? If you guessed water, you’re right!

    WATER, WATER EVERYWHERE

    It is hard to say enough good things about water. Water is the most abundant compound in the human body, making up about 60% of the body weight in adults. It fills virtually every space in cells and between them. All biochemical reactions occur in water, and water is an active participant in those reactions. From energy production to joint lubrication to reproduction, there is no system in your body that does not depend on water.

    But with all the obvious importance of water it appears that most of us aren’t drinking enough. Nearly one-third of the U.S. population is walking around slightly dehydrated. “So what?” you ask. “What’s the big deal about being slightly dehydrated?”

    A VOLUMINOUS PROBLEM
    Just about anyone who knows anything knows that you can get pretty sick and even die from severe dehydration. But the fact is that chronic, mild dehydration, a constant 1 to 2 percent deficit of body weight caused by loss of fluids, can have a measurable effect on mental and physical performance, muscle growth, and even long term health.

    WATER AND YOUR MUSCLES

    Since muscles are nearly 70 percent water, even a small loss of fluid will affect their function. Muscles are controlled by nerves. The electrical stimulation of nerves and contraction of muscles occurs due to the exchange of electrolytes dissolved in water across the nerve and muscle cell membranes. If you’re low on water or electrolytes, muscle strength and control are weakened. A water deficit of just 2 to 4 percent of your body weight can cut your strength-training workout by as much as 21 percent, and your aerobic power by a whopping 48 percent!

    If gaining muscle is your goal, then you should care about cell volumization, or the hydration state of your muscle cells. In a well-hydrated muscle cell, protein synthesis is stimulated and protein breakdown is decreased. On the other hand, muscle-cell dehydration promotes protein breakdown and inhibits protein synthesis. Cell volume has also been shown to influence genetic expression, enzyme and hormone activity, and metabolic regulation.

    WATER AND YOUR FAT
    When your goal is losing body fat, water is your friend. It can help take the edge off hunger so that you eat less, and it has no calories. If you are on a high protein diet, water is required to detoxify ammonia, a by-product of protein energy metabolism. And as you mobilize your stored fatty acids to burn off as energy, you release any fat-soluble toxins that have been benignly stored in your fat cells. The more fluid you drink the more dilute the toxins in your bloodstream, and the more rapidly they exit from your body.

    WATER AND YOUR BRAIN
    When it comes to peak mental capacity, whether in school or in competition, your hydration state will affect your performance. In a study of subjects’ abilities to perform mental exercises after heat-stress induced dehydration, a fluid loss of only 2 percent of body weight caused reductions in arithmetic ability, short-term memory, and the ability to visually track an object by 20 percent compared to their well-hydrated state.

    WATER AND YOUR HEALTH
    Probably most surprising is the effect that chronic, mild dehydration has on health and disease. It was a practice of Hippocrates to recommend large intakes of water to increase urine production and decrease the recurrence of urinary tract stones. Today approximately 12 to 15 percent of the general population will form a kidney stone at some time. Many factors can modify the urinary risk factors for developing stones. Of these, diet – especially fluid intake – is the only one that can be easily changed and that has a marked effect on all urinary risk factors.

    Several studies have discovered a direct correlation between fluid intake and the incidence of certain cancers. Studies in Israel, Great Britain, and the United States have observed that the more fluid that people drink, the lower their risks of bladder, prostate, kidney, testicle, renal pelvis, ureter, colon, and breast cancers. In some of the studies, a decrease in cancer risk was specifically associated with water intake. For instance, a study in Seattle, Washington showed that women who drank more than 5 glasses of water a day had a 45 percent decreased risk of colon cancer vs those who consumed 2 or fewer glasses per day. Men had a non-statistically significant reduction of cancer by 32 percent when they drank more than 4 glasses a day vs 1 or fewer glasses a day. Although the data are preliminary, a pilot study in Great Britain found that the risk for developing breast cancer was reduced by 79 percent among water drinkers when adjusted for all other related factors.

    Mild dehydration can also be a factor in the occurrence of mitral valve prolapse. In a study of 14 healthy women with normal heart function, mitral valve prolapse was induced by mild dehydration, and resolved with rehydration.

    YOUR FLUID PLAN
    Contrary to our drive to eat, our drive to drink is not as keen. Our thirst mechanism doesn’t kick in until we are already mildly dehydrated. When you’re working out moderately in a mild climate, you are probably losing 1 to 2 quarts (2 to 4 pounds) of fluid per hour through perspiration. That means that a 150 pound person can easily lose 2 percent of their body weight in fluid (3 pounds) within an hour. If exercise is more intense, or the environment is more extreme fluid losses will be greater. You can see how easily you become dehydrated. If you don’t replenish your fluid losses during exercise, you will fatigue early and your performance will be diminished. Without fluid replenishment after exercise, your performance on successive days will decay, and your long-term health may be at risk.

    Design a fluid plan just like you plan your food: a couple cups when you get up in the morning, a few more mid-morning, a couple at lunch, again in the mid-afternoon and at dinner. At least five cups should be water, so have a water bottle with you when you head out the door in the morning. That covers your minimum intake. Make sure you have no more than 50 to 100 mg of caffeine (1 cup of coffee has 80-140 mg; 12 oz. cola has about 50 mg ; 1 cup black tea has about 70 mg; cans of energy drinks range from 100-1200 mg caffeine) and no alcohol, since more caffeine and any alcohol can promote water loss. Then add what you need to be well hydrated before, during, and after exercise.

    Monitor your hydration status. One of the easiest ways is to check your urine: it should be relatively odorless and no darker colored than straw. Anything more and it is a good sign that you are dehydrated and need to be drinking more.

    DON’T GET CAUGHT EMPTY-HANDED

    Many factors increase water requirements, including high heat, low humidity, high altitude, exercise, dieting, illness, travel and pregnancy. Carry water and fluids with you as a constant reminder to drink. Freeze fluids in water bottles to keep them cold during long-distance exercise. Don’t forget that fruits and vegetables are great sources of water. And whoever is driving you to drink, tell them “thank you!”

    SYMPTOMS OF DEHYDRATION
    EARLY SIGNS SEVERE SIGNS
    Fatigue Difficulty swallowing
    Loss of appetite Stumbling
    Flushed skin Clumsiness
    Burning in stomach Shriveled skin
    Light-headedness Sunken eyes and dim vision
    Headache Painful urination
    Dry mouth Numb skin
    Dry cough Muscle spasm
    Heat intolerance Delirium
    Dark urine with a strong odor

    FLUID GUIDELINES

    • Drink a minimum of 1 quart (4 cups) of fluid for every 1,000 calories you eat every day.
    • Drink at least 5 cups of water every day.
    • Fluids should be cool.
    • For moderate exercise that lasts an hour or less, water is sufficient for replacing lost fluids. If you like flavored drinks better, then use flavored beverages.
    • For intense exercise that lasts less than 1 hour and exercise lasting more than an hour, carbohydrate-electrolyte sport drinks are best.
    • Drink 2 cups of fluid 2 hours before exercise.
    • Drink 4-6 ounces every 15 to 20 minutes during exercise.
    • Drink 4-6 ounces every 15 to 20 minutes during exercise.
    • After exercise, drink 16-20 ounces (2-2½ cups) of fluid for every pound of body weight lost during exercise

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