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James et al. Cow s milk as a post-exercise recovery drink-CLEAN-Acknowledgements.pdf (283.27 kB)

Cow's milk as a post-exercise recovery drink: implications for performance and health

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journal contribution
posted on 2019-03-08, 09:48 authored by Lewis JamesLewis James, Emma J. Stevenson, Penny L.S. Rumbold, Carl Hulston
Post-exercise recovery is a multi-facetted process that will vary depending on the nature of the exercise, the time between exercise sessions and the goals of the exerciser. From a nutritional perspective, the main considerations are: (1) optimisation of muscle protein turnover; (2) glycogen resynthesis; (3) rehydration; (4) management of muscle soreness; (5) appropriate management of energy balance. Milk is approximately isotonic (osmolality of 280–290 mosmol/kg), and the mixture of high quality protein, carbohydrate, water and micronutrients (particularly sodium) make it uniquely suitable as a post-exercise recovery drink in many exercise scenarios. Research has shown that ingestion of milk post-exercise has the potential to beneficially impact both acute recovery and chronic training adaptation. Milk augments post-exercise muscle protein synthesis and rehydration, can contribute to post-exercise glycogen resynthesis, and attenuates post-exercise muscle soreness/function losses. For these aspects of recovery, milk is at least comparable and often out performs most commercially available recovery drinks, but is available at a fraction of the cost, making it a cheap and easy option to facilitate post-exercise recovery. Milk ingestion post-exercise has also been shown to attenuate subsequent energy intake and may lead to more favourable body composition changes with exercise training. This means that those exercising for weight management purposes might be able to beneficially influence post-exercise recovery, whilst maintaining the energy deficit created by exercise.

History

School

  • Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences

Published in

European Journal of Sport Science

Volume

19

Issue

1

Pages

40 - 48

Citation

JAMES, L.J. ... et al, 2018. Cow's milk as a post-exercise recovery drink: implications for performance and health. European Journal of Sport Science, 19 (1), pp.40-48.

Publisher

Taylor & Francis © European College of Sport Science

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Publisher statement

This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in European Journal of Sport Science on 31 Oct 2018, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/17461391.2018.1534989

Publication date

2018-10-31

Copyright date

2019

ISSN

1746-1391

eISSN

1536-7290

Language

  • en