Abstract

This study assessed voluntary dietary intake when different beverages were provided within a recovery area following recreational exercise. Participants completed two 10-km runs 1 week apart. Immediately after the first run, "beer drinkers" (n = 54; mean ± SD: age = 23.9 ± 5.8 years, body mass [BM] = 76 ± 13kg) randomly received low-alcohol beer (Hahn Ultra® [Lion Co.], 0.9% alcohol by volume) or sports drink (SD; Gatorade® [PepsiCo]), whereas "nonbeer drinkers" (n = 78; age = 21.8 ± 2.2years, BM = 71 ± 13kg) received water or SD. Participants remained in a recovery area for 30-60min with fluid consumption monitored. The following week, participants received the alternate beverage. Participants recorded all food/fluid consumed for the remainder of both trial days (diary and photographs). Fluid balance was assessed via BM change and urine specific gravity. Paired t tests were used to assess differences in hydration and dietary variables. No differences were observed in preexercise urine specific gravity (∼1.01) or BM loss (∼2%) between intervention groups (ps > .05). Water versus SD: No difference in acute fluid intake was noted (water = 751 ± 259ml, SD = 805 ± 308ml, p = .157). SD availability influenced total energy and carbohydrate intakes (water = 5.7 ± 2.5MJ and 151 ± 77g, SD = 6.5 ± 2.7MJ and 187 ± 87g, energy p = .002, carbohydrate p < .001). SD versus beer: SD availability resulted in greater acute fluid intake (SD = 1,047 ± 393ml, beer = 850 ± 630ml; p = .004), which remained evident at the end of trial days (SD = 3,337 ± 1,100ml, beer = 2,982 ± 1,191ml; p < .01). No differences in dietary variables were observed. Next day, urine specific gravity values were not different between water versus SD. However, a small difference was detected between SD versus beer (SD = 1.021 ± 0.009, beer = 1.016 ± 0.008, p = .002). Consuming calorie-containing drinks postexercise appears to increase daily energy and carbohydrate intake but has minimal impact on next-day hydration.

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