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Journal ArticleDOI

Promoting training adaptations through nutritional interventions

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TLDR
The molecular and cellular events that occur in skeletal muscle during exercise and subsequent recovery are reviewed, and the potential for nutrient supplementation to affect many of the adaptive responses to training is reviewed.
Abstract
Training and nutrition are highly interrelated in that optimal adaptation to the demands of repeated training sessions typically requires a diet that can sustain muscle energy reserves. As nutrient stores (i.e. muscle and liver glycogen) play a predominant role in the performance of prolonged, intense, intermittent exercise typical of the patterns of soccer match-play, and in the replenishment of energy reserves for subsequent training sessions, the extent to which acutely altering substrate availability might modify the training impulse has been a key research area among exercise physiologists and sport nutritionists for several decades. Although the major perturbations to cellular homeostasis and muscle substrate stores occur during exercise, the activation of several major signalling pathways important for chronic training adaptations take place during the first few hours of recovery, returning to baseline values within 24 h after exercise. This has led to the paradigm that many chronic training adaptations are generated by the cumulative effects of the transient events that occur during recovery from each (acute) exercise bout. Evidence is accumulating that nutrient supplementation can serve as a potent modulator of many of the acute responses to both endurance and resistance training. In this article, we review the molecular and cellular events that occur in skeletal muscle during exercise and subsequent recovery, and the potential for nutrient supplementation (e.g. carbohydrate, fat, protein) to affect many of the adaptive responses to training.

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Citations
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Short‐term sprint interval versus traditional endurance training: similar initial adaptations in human skeletal muscle and exercise performance

TL;DR: Data demonstrate that SIT is a time‐efficient strategy to induce rapid adaptations in skeletal muscle and exercise performance that are comparable to ET in young active men.
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Physical and metabolic demands of training and match-play in the elite football player.

TL;DR: There are major individual differences in the physical demands of players during a game related to physical capacity and tactical role in the team, and these differences should be taken into account when planning the training and nutritional strategies of top-class players, who require a significant energy intake during a week.
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The molecular bases of training adaptation

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of exercise on molecular and genetic mechanisms of training adaptation in skeletal muscle were investigated. But the results of these adaptations are determined by training volume, intensity and frequency, and the half-life of the protein.
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Skeletal muscle adaptation and performance responses to once a day versus twice every second day endurance training regimens.

TL;DR: While selected markers of training adaptation were enhanced with twice a day training, the performance of a 1-h time trial undertaken after a 60-min steady-state ride was similar after once daily or twice every second day training programs.
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The use of dietary supplements by athletes

TL;DR: There are well-documented roles for creatine, caffeine, and alkalinizing agents in enhancing performance in high-intensity exercise, although much of the evidence does not relate to specific athletic events.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Diet, Muscle Glycogen and Physical Performance

TL;DR: It has been shown that the glycogen content and, consequently, the long-term work capacity can be appreciably varied by instituting different diets after glycogen depletion.
Book

Exercise : regulation and integration of multiple systems

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analyses of the cellular, molecular and Metabolic Basis of Muscle Fatigue, and discusses the role of Exercise in the development of Neural Control of Movement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mixed muscle protein synthesis and breakdown after resistance exercise in humans

TL;DR: It is concluded that exercise resulted in an increase in muscle net protein balance that persisted for up to 48 h after the exercise bout and was unrelated to the type of muscle contraction performed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strong correlation of maximal squat strength with sprint performance and vertical jump height in elite soccer players

TL;DR: There was a strong correlation between maximal strength in half squats and sprint performance and jumping height in high level soccer players, and high squat strength did not imply reduced maximal oxygen consumption.
Book

The Physiology of Soccer : With Special Reference to Intense Intermittent Exercise

TL;DR: The present thesis deals with the physiological demands of soccer, with a particular focus on the physiological response to repeated intense exercise, and performs physiological measurements in connection with soccer matches.
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Trending Questions (1)
What are the chronic adaptations to the muscular system from long jump training?

The provided paper does not specifically mention chronic adaptations to the muscular system from long jump training.