Amino Acids and How They Relate to Athletics
By: Mike • Essay • 284 Words • January 14, 2010 • 1,131 Views
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After a paper published by the American Dietetic Association in 1987, high protein intakes or excessive amino acids supplements have not been demonstrated to increase athletic performance. After nutritionist, the plain old answer of "eat balanced, eat normal" still remains the best known method: 0.8 grams of protein for an adult for each kilogram of body weight (recommended dietary allowance). On the other hand, more studies on athletes doing intensive training have suggested that as protein is broken down in the muscles and converted into energy, a higher intake of 1g might be necessary (so that an 82kg person might need 82 grams of protein instead of 66). Considering that a hamburger with one slice of cheese is already 40 grams of protein, reaching the RDA is not that hard, so that most Americans consume in the end twice as much protein as needed, whether they are physically active or not.
Older researches said that taking too much protein won't do any harm, but more recent studies sustain the contrary. Too much protein and amino