“Nutrition is the Key to Sustainable Performance Enhancement”
RH+ offers the most advance Functional Sports Nutrition therapy for Athletes. Nutrition and Supplements play a major role in recovering capabilities and injury prevention in sports. It also enhances sports performance along with cognitive and strength gains. Neurotrnsmitters play an important role in motivation, recovery, muscle innervation and focus during an event.
Hormones Role in Sports Performance
The hormones like DHEAS, Cortisol and Testosterone affect the sports performance directly and indirectly. DHEA and Cortisol are the body’s long-acting stress hormones and are antagonistic to each other to some degree. Whereas DHEA has an anabolic or building influence, cortisol has a catabolic or tearing down effect on the body. These two hormones must be in proper balance for optimal health and performance in sports.
Cortisol
It acts as a strong anti-inflammatory agent for recovery purpose. But Cortisol if chronically elevated, can be detrimental to health and performance. Cortisol and DHEA directly affect other hormones and functions in the body. Abnormal levels of these hormones contribute to a greater likelihood of sports injuries and slower recovery times.
Cortisol and DHEA imbalances affect carbohydrates and fats metabolism, leading to a premature drop in blood sugar levels during workouts. It cuts off the fuel supply to the brain and body at critical moments. Under Adrenal Stress, blood sugar fluctuations are common.
This causes a sudden drop or rises in blood sugar levels which can affect performance severely. A [study] on cortisol and its effect on sports performance
Cortisol levels vary throughout the day; rises in the morning, at peak during noon and then gradually decreases to almost zero at midnight. Variations in cortisol at specific times in our daily rhythm reflect different health problems.
High night time cortisol levels reflect an inability to shut down our stress response before sleep. This often occurs in people who have trouble getting to sleep or staying asleep.
Conversely, some people have low cortisol production. This is seen in people with significant fatigue, a poor immune response, and in athletes with unexplained performance problems. These might include weak concentration, determination and other ‘mental focus’ problems.