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  • "Comparing Vegetarian and Vegan Athletic PerformanceEndurance, and Strength"

  • Few studies have investigated the impact of a plant-based diet

  • on athletic performance, but the majority of the studies

  • that have been done show no differences in endurance, performance, or strength.

  • So, while plant-based diets do not seem to provide advantages

  • or disadvantages on exercise performance,

  • what plant-based diets can do is reduce the risk of chronic disease.

  • This is a point I made in my video

  • Why All Athletes Should Eat Plant-Based Diets,

  • because surprisingly, endurance athletes may have

  • more advanced atherosclerosis and more heart muscle damage,

  • compared with sedentary individuals.

  • So, it's even more important they eat healthy.

  • But due to the favorable impact on health,

  • it could be assumed that performance would also be influenced

  • by plant-based diets.

  • Let's take a closer look at the available evidence.

  • This is the most commonly cited review.

  • Studies connecting vegetarian diets to improved health

  • are well-established;

  • however, the evidence for this phenomenon to be transferred

  • to improved physical performance in athletes is less clear,

  • finding no differencesat least acutely

  • between a vegetarian-based diet and an omnivorous diet

  • in muscular power, muscular strength, short burst, or endurance performance.

  • The intervention studies in this review, however, only lasted days or weeks.

  • So, being a vegetarian for four days may not tip the balance,

  • or even a few months, but that's a considerable limitation.

  • These are people who have been eating meat

  • their whole lives

  • and subsequently adopt a vegetarian diet only

  • for the duration of the study, rather than comparing participants

  • who have adhered to a vegetarian or meat-containing diet long-term.

  • This study compared exercise capacity of vegan, vegetarian,

  • and meat-eating recreational runners and found

  • similar maximum power output among all three groups,

  • suggesting there's no significant difference in maximum exercise capacity.

  • But that's at the same training frequency, time, and distance.

  • Perhaps plant-based diets might enhance recovery

  • and allow such athletes to train longer and harder?

  • A number of studies have come out since this review

  • was published in 2016. What's the update?

  • Well, this study compared the cardiorespiratory fitness

  • and peak torque strength differences between vegetarian

  • and omnivore endurance athletes.

  • Most of the vegetarians were actually vegans

  • and most or at least two years and

  • results from this study indicate that

  • vegetarian endurance athletes' cardiorespiratorytness

  • was greater than that for their omnivorous counterparts.

  • They had a greater VO2 max,

  • meaning a greater maximal oxygen uptake,

  • greater aerobic capacity as measured on a progressive,

  • graded, maximal treadmill test to exhaustion,

  • though peak torque, peak strength based on leg extensions

  • didn't differ between diet groups.

  • Bottom line: these data suggest that vegetarian diets

  • do not compromise performance outcomes

  • and may facilitate aerobic capacity in athletes.

  • In this 2020 study, all the plant- based participants were eating vegan

  • for an average of four years.

  • So, they were essentially comparing those who ate meat for 21 years

  • versus those who ate meat for 25 years.

  • But after four years eating plants,

  • you might expect to see some sort of difference.

  • Yet, no signicant differences were noted for upper

  • and lower body muscle strength, like in the last new study.

  • Both groups of athletes were comparable for total body weight

  • and lean body mass, though age was signicantly higher in vegans

  • compared with omnivores;

  • so, that put them at a little disadvantage.

  • Yet still, there it is again.

  • Significantly better aerobic capacity.

  • Then, they had them pedal until exhaustion,

  • and the vegan group lasted about 25 percent longer

  • 12 minutes as opposed to 9 minutes.

  • Is that just because their aerobic capacity is so high?

  • No, even after controlling for VO2 max levels, there was still

  • a signicant endurance advantage in the vegans.

  • The researchers conclude that in the very least,

  • a strictly plant-based diet doesn't seem to be detrimental

  • to endurance and muscle strength,

  • and endurance might actually be better in vegans,

  • contrary to popular belief.

"Comparing Vegetarian and Vegan Athletic PerformanceEndurance, and Strength"

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Comparing Vegetarian and Vegan Athletic Performance, Endurance, and Strength

  • 15 1
    林宜悉 發佈於 2023 年 03 月 12 日
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