Herald on Sunday

Do you need that sports drink?

- Niki Bezzant u@nikibezzan­t

At a recent food trends seminar I tried a few foods and drinks of the future. Among them was a golden-hued, medicinall­ooking beverage called shine+, promoted as “Australia’s first smart drink”.

It’s what’s known as a functional beverage, designed — its producers say — to optimise brain function, concentrat­ion and focus.

It contains what are known as nootropics, compounds that enhance mental function. The nootropics in this drink include turmeric (hence the colour), green tea and ginkgo biloba.

This is the latest developmen­t in a category that also includes energy drinks, vitamin waters and probiotic yoghurt. The most well-known of functional beverages, though, is probably the sports drink.

Sports drinks are sophistica­ted beverages formulated for athletes doing high-intensity exercise.

When exercising for an hour or more and sweating a lot, rehydratio­n is really important.

Sports drinks have been shown to delay fatigue and improve exercise performanc­e in these circumstan­ces.

The carbohydra­te in the form of sugar in these drinks is a quick source of energy and helps the gut absorb water. Electrolyt­es like sodium and potassium replace what is lost in sweat, and sodium helps with rehydratio­n too.

The All Blacks, then, need their Gatorade. But what about the rest of us? Is a sports drink what we need after a big

Sports drinks are probably just giving us calories and sugar we don’t need.

gym workout or a tough game of touch?

The answer is probably no. Sports drinks are probably just giving us calories and sugar we don’t need, and that applies whether we’re exercising or not.

The evidence seems to support this. One study looked at healthy men and compared the effects of water, coconut water and a sports drink after 60 minutes of dehydratin­g exercise on a treadmill.

It found all drinks were equally as effective for rehydratio­n.

For most of us, water is fine for hydration (although post-workout, a case can be made for milk, too). Water is also free.

Sports drinks can be high in sugar and energy — necessary for those elite athletes, but not for an average gym-goer, who’s in danger of consuming more calories than their workout is burning off.

Some sports drinks can contain 10 or more teaspoons of added sugar — more than is recommende­d we have in a day.

We often over-estimate how much energy we’re burning with exercise. If weight loss is a goal, we’re better off not undoing all the good work we’ve done by reaching for a sports drink.

Kids don’t need sports drinks; they’re really just another sugary drink with the same consequenc­es for weight and teeth.

A 2014 study found young people who consumed one or more sports drinks each day gained more weight over a three year period than their peers.

And what about the popular wisdom of sports drink as hangover cure? The expert view seems to be don’t waste your money.

Yes, we need rehydratio­n when we’re hung over, but water will do the trick. Sadly the only reliable solution to this one is not to drink too much alcohol in the first place.

Niki Bezzant is editor-at-large for

Healthy Food Guide.

 ?? NZME ?? Elite athletes might benefit from sports drinks, but an average gym-user won’t burn off the calories.
NZME Elite athletes might benefit from sports drinks, but an average gym-user won’t burn off the calories.
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