Nutritional behaviour and beliefs of ski-mountaineers: a semi-quantitative and qualitative study

Dec 15, 2015Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition

Eating habits and beliefs of ski-mountaineers: a mixed-method study

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Abstract

Energy consumption among amateur ski-mountaineering athletes was 2416 ± 696 kcal · day(-1), which is only 83 ± 17% of the recommended intake.

  • Carbohydrate intake was only 46 ± 13% of the minimal recommended level of 10 g · kg(-1) · day(-1).
  • Fluid intake averaged 2.7 ± 1.0 l · day(-1), which may be insufficient for optimal performance.
  • Athletes believed that their pre-race carbohydrate, energy, and fluid intake should be increased.
  • Despite their beliefs and basic knowledge about nutrition, athletes did not follow pre-race nutritional recommendations.
  • A lack of a clear and reflective nutritional strategy was evident among the athletes.

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Key numbers

2416 ± 696 kcal · day(-1)
Energy Intake
Average daily energy consumption among participants
46 ± 13%
Carbohydrate Intake
Percentage of minimal recommended carbohydrate intake
2.7 ± 1.0 l · day(-1)
Fluid Intake
Average daily fluid consumption

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What this is

  • This research examines the nutritional behaviors and beliefs of amateur ski-mountaineers in the days leading up to a major race.
  • It compares actual dietary intake with official nutritional recommendations.
  • The study involved 40 athletes who completed food diaries and interviews to assess their pre-race nutrition strategies.

Essence

  • Amateur ski-mountaineers did not meet pre-race nutritional recommendations despite believing in their importance. Energy and carbohydrate intakes were significantly below guidelines, indicating a gap between knowledge and practice.

Key takeaways

  • Energy intake averaged 2416 ± 696 kcal · day(-1), which is 83 ± 17% of the recommended intake. Athletes consumed less energy than advised, impacting their performance potential.
  • Carbohydrate intake was only 46 ± 13% of the minimal recommended level of 10 g · kg(-1) · day(-1). This suggests a misunderstanding of pre-race among the athletes.
  • Fluid intake averaged 2.7 ± 1.0 l · day(-1), which is slightly above the habitual recommendation but still below optimal levels for endurance performance.

Caveats

  • The analysis was based on 40 complete food diaries, which may not represent all amateur athletes. This limits the generalizability of the findings.
  • Interviews were conducted two years after the race, which may have led to inaccuracies in recalling dietary behaviors.

Definitions

  • Carbohydrate loading: A strategy involving increased carbohydrate intake before endurance events to maximize glycogen stores.

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