Energy bars, touted for improving athletic performance while
providing the right combination of essential nutrients,
may not always give endurance athletes the boost they expect.An Ohio State University researcher compared two popular energy
bars and found that one of the bars
didn't give the moderate increase in blood sugar known to
enhance performance in endurance athletes.
Instead, its effect was much like a candy bar - giving a big
rush of sugar to the blood, followed by a sharp decline.
"Theoretically, energy bars produce more moderate increases and
decreases in blood sugar levels than a typical candy bar," said
Steve
Hertzler, an associate professor of medical dietetics at Ohio
State.
"But these claims aren't necessarily valid." His study appears
in a recent issue of the Journal of the
American Dietetic Association.
Hertzler wanted to know how energy bars affected blood glucose
levels. Glucose is a sugar that provides energy to the body's
cells - for
example, red-blood cells and most parts of the brain derive most
of their energy from glucose.
"Athletes - especially those involved in endurance sports - want
to enhance performance, and energy bars claim to help keep blood
sugar
levels at a moderate level," Hertzler said.
Volunteers had to fast for at least 12 hours before taking part
in each of four experiments. Then, they ate one of four
experimental "meals"
consisting of either four slices of white bread; a Snickers bar;
an Ironman PR Bar; or a PowerBar. Each experimental meal
provided the
same amount of carbohydrates (50 grams.)
Hertzler then tested the effects these foods had on blood
glucose levels at 15-minute intervals for up to two hours after
each experimental
meal. The volunteers had to wait at least 24 hours between each
experimental meal. Hertzler measured each subject's blood
samples for
glucose levels, to determine which food most raised blood sugar
levels.
Both energy bars caused blood glucose levels to peak at 30
minutes, while levels peaked at 45 minutes after the bread and
candy bar
were consumed. Blood glucose levels declined steadily throughout
the duration of testing for all foods but the Ironman PR Bar.
This bar
caused blood glucose rates to remain fairly steady, probably
because of the moderate carbohydrate level of the bar, according
to Hertzler.
"Though blood glucose rates peaked at 30 minutes with both bars,
the high-carbohydrate energy bar - the PowerBar - caused a much
sharper decline," Hertzler said. "In fact, the decline was
sharper than with the candy bar." Much of the energy derived
from the bread and
the candy bar came from carbohydrate and the same was true for
the PowerBar. While the bar is low in protein and fat, more than
70
percent of it is made up of carbohydrate (such as high-fructose
corn syrup; oat bran; and brown rice). In contrast, 40 percent
of the Ironman
PR is comprised of carbohydrate (high fructose corn syrup and
fructose.) The rest of the bar was
comprised of 30 percent fat and 30 percent protein.
"The composition of this bar may have been responsible for the
diminished blood glucose response," Hertzler said. "Athletes
involved in
short-duration events who want a quick energy boost should eat a
high-carbohydrate energy bar or a candy bar," he
suggests. "However,
endurance athletes would do well to consume an energy bar with a
moderate carbohydrate level."
Hertzler conducted this study while at Kent State University in
Kent, Ohio. He is continuing similar research at Ohio State.
Contact: Steve Hertzler, (614) 292-0635; Hertzler.4@osu.edu
Written by Holly Wagner, (614) 292-8310; Wagner.235@osu.edu
Editor's note: This research was funded by a grant from Kent
State University. The researcher received no funding from either
energy
bar manufacturer.
http://www.eurekalert.org/releases/osun-
atn032000.html