Chocolate Milk's 'Natural' Muscle Recovery Benefits Match Or May Even Surpass A Specially Designed Carbohydrate Sports Drink
Main Category: Nutrition / DietAlso Included In: Sports Medicine / Fitness; Clinical Trials / Drug Trials
Article Date: 02 Jun 2009 - 6:00 PDT
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Soccer players and exercise enthusiasts now have another reason to reach for lowfat chocolate milk after a hard workout, suggests a new study from James Madison University presented at the American College of Sports Medicine annual meeting. Post-exercise consumption of lowfat chocolate milk was found to provide equal or possibly superior muscle recovery compared to a high-carbohydrate recovery beverage with the same amount of calories.
In this study, 13 male college soccer players participated in "normal" training for one week, then were given lowfat chocolate milk or a high-carbohydrate recovery beverage daily after intense training for four days. After a two week break, the athletes went through a second round of "normal" training, followed by four-day intensified training to compare their recovery experiences following each beverage (with the same amount of calories). Prior to the intense training, at day two and at the completion of this double-blind study, the researchers conducted specific tests to evaluate "markers" of muscle recovery.
All of the athletes increased their daily training times during the intensified training, regardless of post-exercise beverage yet after two and four days of intensified training, chocolate milk drinkers had significantly lower levels of creatine kinase - an indicator of muscle damage - compared to when they drank the carbohydrate beverage. There were no differences between the two beverages in effects on, soccer-specific performance tests, subjective ratings of muscle soreness, mental and physical fatigue and other measures of muscle strength. The results indicate that lowfat chocolate milk is effective in the recovery and repair of muscles after intense training for these competitive soccer players.
This new study adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting milk may be just as effective as some commercial sports drinks in helping athletes recover and rehydrate. Chocolate milk has the advantage of additional nutrients not found in most traditional sports drinks. Studies suggest that when consumed after exercise, milk's mix of high-quality protein and carbohydrates can help refuel exhausted muscles. The protein in milk helps build lean muscle and recent research suggests it may reduce exercise-induced muscle damage. Milk also provides fluids for rehydration and minerals like calcium, potassium and magnesium that recreational exercisers and elite athletes alike need to replace after strenuous activity.
Nearly 18 million Americans play soccer, according to American Sports Data, and millions more engage in recreational sports. Many experts agree that the two-hour window after exercise is an important, yet often neglected, part of a fitness routine. After strenuous exercise, this post-workout recovery period is critical for active people at all fitness levels â€" to help make the most of a workout and stay in top shape for the next exercise bout. Sweating not only results in fluid losses, but also important minerals including calcium, potassium and magnesium. The best recovery routine should replace fluids and nutrients lost in sweat, and help muscles recover.
Increasingly, fitness experts consider chocolate milk an effective (and affordable and enjoyable) option as a post-exercise recovery drink. The Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend that Americans drink three glasses of lowfat or fat free milk every day. Drinking lowfat chocolate milk after a workout is a good place to start.
Source: Gilson SF, Saunders MJ, Moran CW, Corriere DF, Moore RW, Womack CJ, Todd MK. Effects of chocolate milk consumption on markers of muscle recovery during intensified soccer training. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 2009;41:S577.
Source:
Gloria Delgadillo
Weber Shandwick Worldwide
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posted by EM BASDEN on 12 Sep 2011 at 2:28 amSuffering from Poly Myalgia and veeery painful muscles and always looking for some way to help myself,i followed an athletes advice and drank a glass of chocolate milk and hey presto, within minutes the pains had all but disappeared...a delicious, nourishing, naughty but nice way to have respite from almost continual pain.
So great to know it had scientific foundations for its efficacy and not just my imagination!
how much sugar and nutrients exsist?
posted by Alliew on 1 Dec 2011 at 7:05 amI have heard this before. But what about the sugar from the chocolate? Does it help in pushing the protein in the muscles? or could you just drink milk. My other arguements for milk, is that it makes mucus thicker if your dealing with a cold or allergies. Humans are the only mammals to drink milk after being weaned. Whole milk probably has more of the nutrition as far as calcium, potassium and magnisum but lowfat milk is it not boiled down so much that it lacks most of those?
Chocolate milk is not a good recover drink!
posted by Goez S. on 2 Jan 2012 at 11:31 pmChocolate milk is loaded with sugar and lacks the vitamins and minerals that other recovery drinks offer. I'm all for creating your own recovery drink (if you know what you're doing), but if you don't know what you're doing, you can really screw up your diet and end up gaining more weight. If you're looking for taste with all the benefits of protein, carbs, low sugar, antioxidants, and loads of vitamins and minerals, I suggest you try Bonavitas R12. Tastes like the Mexican rice drink Horchata, minus all the sugar of choco milk.
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