Eating beetroot may improve running speed
5, May ,Daily Telegraph
Eating beetroot can boost athletic performance, research has
suggested, by helping runners finish faster.
cientists have discovered athletes who eat baked beetroot before a
race run put in a faster time. The purple root vegetable contains high
levels of chemicals called nitrates, which have been shown to boost
exercise performance. Researchers at St Louis University in America
found athletes were able to run five kilometres faster after eating
beetroot than after eating cranberries. It follows other studies that
have shown beetroot juice can increase stamina and make muscles more
efficient. The St Louis team recruited 11 fit and healthy men and women
and asked them to run five kilometres on a treadmill, twice.
Before the first run, the volunteers consumed a portion of baked
beetroot, of about 200 grams, or 7 ounces, of beetroot just over an hour
before hitting the treadmill.Before the second run, they ate an
equivalent amount of cranberry relish, chosen because it has a similar
calorific content to beetroot but without the same nitrate levels.The
results, published in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and
Dietetics, showed that after eating the cranberry relish, the runners
averaged a speed of 11.9 kilometres per hour, or 7.3mph.But after
consuming beetroot, their average speed went up to 12.3 kilometres per
hour, around 7.6mph.
Researchers said runners appear to be able to speed up in the last
section of the run after eating beetroot.In a report on their findings,
they said: "During the last 1.1 miles of the run, speed was five per
cent faster in the beetroot trial."Lead author Margaret Murphy wrote in
the journal: "Consumption of nitrate-rich, whole beetroot improves
running performance in healthy adults."Because whole vegetables have
been shown to have health benefits, whereas nitrates from other sources
may have detrimental health effects, it would be prudent for individuals
seeking performance benefits to obtain nitrates from whole vegetables,
such as beetroot."It follows previous research on the benefits of
beetroot juice carried by out Peninsula Medical School in Exeter.One
published in the Journal of Applied Physiology in 2010, found that after
drinking the juice participants muscles were more efficient and used
less oxygen while walking.
Katie Lansley, a PhD student from the university’s Sport and Health
Sciences department and lead author of the study, said: “As you get
older, or if you have conditions which affect your cardiovascular
system, the amount of oxygen you can take in to use during exercise
drops considerably. This means that, for some people, even simple tasks
like walking may not be manageable.“What we’ve seen in this study is
that beetroot juice can actually reduce the amount of oxygen you need to
perform even low-intensity exercise. In principle, this effect could
help people do things they wouldn’t otherwise be able to do.” Beetroot
juice seemed to widen blood vessels, reducing blood pressure and
allowing more blood flow and affected muscle reducing the amount of
oxygen needed during activity.
In 2009 Peninsula researchers found drinking beetroot juice could
have a powerful effect on stamina and endurance, as well as lower blood
pressure. The researchers, from the University of Exeter and the
Peninsula Medical School, also in Exeter, recruited eight healthy young
men to complete a series of cycling tests.They took them twice – after
drinking beetroot juice once a day for six days and after drinking
blackcurrant cordial.When tasked with cycling at an easy pace, the men
used less oxygen after drinking beetroot, suggesting their muscles were
able to do the same amount of work while spending less energy.When they
were asked to cycle for as long as they could before stopping, the
beetroot juice allowed them to pedal an extra minute-and-a-half before
running out of energy.This 16 per cent increase in endurance could mean
someone who normally runs out of steam after jogging for an hour would
be able to keep going for an extra ten minutes.
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