Submitted by Amy Sercel MS RD CD
Edited by Marcia Bristow MS RDN CSSD CD
Carbohydrates are the preferred
source of energy for your brain and muscles.
When you eat carbohydrates in fruits, vegetables, grains, beans, dairy
products, or sweets, they are converted into glucose and either used to provide
immediate fuel for your muscles and brain, or stored as glycogen to be used for
fuel later. Conventional recommendations
suggest that everyone get 45-65% of their calories from carbohydrates to ensure
there is enough fuel to support daily activities and exercise. For the average person who needs 2000
calories per day, this might mean eating around 250 grams of carbohydrates; for
an athlete with much higher calorie needs than the average person, this could
mean eating closer to 400 grams of carbohydrates per day or more. The ketogenic diet, however, has people
questioning whether carbohydrates are really the ideal fuel for athletes.
On the ketogenic diet,
people get 75-80% of their calories from fat and 12-20% of their calories from
protein, and eat less than 20 grams of carbohydrates per day. It was originally designed as a therapeutic
diet prescribed to children with epilepsy.
When your brain doesn’t have glucose to use for energy, your body
converts fat into compounds called ketone bodies, which the brain can use for
fuel. People have begun following the
ketogenic diet with the idea that it will force the body to burn fat for energy
instead of carbohydrates. Since the body
stores more fat than glycogen, this would allow the athlete to perform for
longer without needing to eat more carbohydrates before running out of fuel.1
There are very few
scientific studies looking at the impact of the ketogenic diet on athletic
performance. From these studies, it
appears that people following the ketogenic diet will experience adaptations
that allow them to burn about twice as much fat during exercise than those
following a typical high-carbohydrate diet.1–3 It’s not clear whether this actually results in
any performance benefit. Additionally,
some studies contain design flaws that prevent readers from drawing any firm
conclusions.
For example, one study
placed 20 male endurance athletes into either a high-carbohydrate diet (HCD)
group or a low-carbohydrate ketogenic diet (LCKD) group based on their typical
dietary intake. The researchers found
that people in the LCKD group burned more fat during exercise, increased their
peak power during a sprint, and lost significantly more weight than those in
the HCD group. When the data is looked
at more closely, though, it becomes apparent that the participants in the LCKD
group started out with a significantly higher body fat mass than those in the
HCD group. At the same time, the men in the HCD group were only provided with
general guidelines about following a high-carbohydrate diet, but the LCKD group
received sample meal plans and shopping lists to help them follow the ketogenic
diet.3 Having more information about the diet they needed
to follow and starting with a higher body fat mass makes it more likely that
the men lost weight simply as a result of following a more regimented diet, and
makes it impossible to claim that any improvements in physical performance are
due to diet alone.
Another commonly-cited
study looked at endurance runners and triathletes who consumed a ketogenic diet
for almost two years and found that they burned almost twice as much fat during
activity than athletes eating a typical diet.
The study didn’t measure the impact of the ketogenic diet on the
athletes’ physical performance.2 There is a risk of research bias in this study,
however, because it was funded by Quest Nutrition and the Atkins
Foundation. Quest Nutrition makes
low-carbohydrate sports nutrition products, and the Atkins Foundation is run by
Dr. Robert Atkins, the same individual who created the low-carbohydrate Atkins
diet.
One study does examine the
impact of the ketogenic diet on both fat burning and exercise performance. Like the others, the researchers found that subjects
following a low-carbohydrate diet did burn more fat during exercise. However, the participants on the ketogenic
diet needed to take in more oxygen while they exercised because the body uses
more oxygen to turn stored fat into energy than it does to turn glycogen into
energy. As a result, the athletes’
overall physical performance was worsened by the ketogenic diet.1
Taken together, these
studies show the need for more, well-designed research on the impact of the
ketogenic diet on athletic performance in addition to its influence on the
body’s ability to burn fat. Until that research
is available, it is best to continue following the evidence-based
recommendation to use carbohydrates to fuel your workouts. Fuel up on whole grains, low-fat dairy, and
fruit before a workout, bring snacks to keep you energized during exercise, and
make sure to eat plenty of carbohydrates and protein to help recover from your
activity.
References:
1. Burke
LM, Ross ML, Garvican-Lewis LA, et al. Low carbohydrate, high fat diet impairs
exercise economy and negates the performance benefit from intensified training
in elite race walkers. J Physiol. 2017;595(9):2785-2807.
doi:10.1113/JP273230.
2. Volek JS, Freidenreich DJ, Saenz C, et
al. Metabolic characteristics of keto-adapted ultra-endurance runners. Metabolism.
2016;65(3):100-110. doi:10.1016/j.metabol.2015.10.028.
3. McSwiney FT, Wardrop B, Hyde PN,
Lafountain RA, Volek JS, Doyle L. Keto-adaptation enhances exercise performance
and body composition responses to training in endurance athletes. Metabolism.
doi:10.1016/j.metabol.2017.10.010.
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