What are the effects of alcohol on sports performance
Alcohol often plays a part in sports culture, particularly in team sports. However, recent research highlights its detrimental effects on muscle recovery. An innovative study reveals how consuming alcohol after exercise can undermine your gains, even with optimal protein intake.
How is alcohol metabolised in our bodies?
Alcohol is mainly broken down by the liver through a process involving several enzymes. This transformation has a major impact on the general functioning of your body, particularly in energy production and protein manufacture.
Biological reactions when drinking alcohol
Think of your body as a well-oiled factory. When alcohol enters the picture, it's a bit like a grain of sand slipping through the gears. Your liver, like a zealous worker, immediately goes to work to eliminate it. This cleansing process engages a significant portion of your body's resourcesIt's as if the whole factory were shut down to deal with this small problem.
The body prioritises eliminating alcohol, which means it pays less attention to other processes.
The liver uses two main enzymes to do the housework. The first, thealcohol dehydrogenase (ADH)transforms alcohol into a substance called acetaldehyde. But there's more to come! Acetaldehyde is then converted into acetate by a second enzymealdehyde dehydrogenase (ALDH). It's a bit like alcohol going through two recycling stages before being completely eliminated. All this effort for just a glass!
Discover how alcohol travels through your body and sabotages your muscle gains.
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- Energy production (excess NADH)
- Using fats as fuel
- Glucose synthesis by the liver
- mTOR Signal (muscle growth)
- Recovery and tissue repair
Why is alcohol bad for sport?
Alcohol is a real saboteur of your sporting performance, negatively impacting nearly every aspect of your fitness condition. It reduces your endurance, slows your reflexes and disrupts your coordination, potentially turning your athletic body into a much less efficient machine.
You’ve worked hard to reach your current level, haven’t you? You train hard, eat well, sleep properly, and take high-quality muscle-building supplements. Well, let us tell you that alcohol might just be undermining all your efforts.
Let's explore together why this drink is so detrimental to your athletic performance.
🚫 The 3 major impacts of alcohol on your performance
Alcohol undermines your performance on multiple levels. Discover how it concretely affects your athlete's body.
Negative effects on performance
Alcohol is a bit like putting low-quality fuel (see bad fuel) into the tank of your sports car. Your overall performance takes a serious hit! Studies have shown that even moderate alcohol consumption can reduce performance by 10 to 15%
Impact on hydration and endurance
Alcohol is a real hydration vampire. It increases urine production, which can quickly lead to dehydration. However, even mild dehydration can impair your performance. Alcohol dilates your blood vessels, which can increase blood flow to your skin and reduce it to your working muscles.
Effects on reaction time and coordination
If you engage in a sport that requires precision or quick reflexes, alcohol is your worst enemy. Even in small amounts, it slows down your reaction time and disrupts your hand-eye coordination. Alcohol also affects your balance and proprioception (the awareness of your body's position in space)
What effects does alcohol have on your muscles?
Alcohol has a significant negative impact on your muscles, particularly on muscle protein synthesis and recovery. It can seriously hinder your progress in weight training by slowing down muscle growth and disrupting post-workout repair processes
You’ve just finished an intense workout session, and your friends are suggesting going for a drink to celebrate. Tempting, isn’t it? But before you say yes, let me explain what happens to your muscles when you consume alcohol after exercising.
💪 The 3 ways alcohol undermines your muscles
Alcohol after training directly undermines your muscle gains. Discover how it sabotages your progress.
Impact on Muscle Protein Synthesis
When you lift weights (heavy enough to make you grimace), you create micro-tears in your muscle fibres. This phenomenon, while perfectly normal, is also desirable, as it is through repairing these micro-injuries, along with responding to the metabolic stress generated, that your muscles become larger and stronger.
Effects on Muscle Recovery
After exertion, your body needs to recover. But alcohol, a true saboteur, disrupts this process. It increases the production of cortisol, the stress hormone, which can accelerate the breakdown of muscle proteins. As alcohol dehydrates your body, it also slows down tissue repair and increases muscle soreness.
Consequences for muscle hypertrophy
Muscle hypertrophy, meaning the increase in the size of your muscles, is likely one of your main goals in bodybuilding. Unfortunately, alcohol is a significant barrier to this process. By disrupting protein synthesis and slowing down recovery, it limits your ability to build muscle mass.
⚠️ To remember: Alcohol after training creates a triple destructive effect: it blocks muscle building (-37% protein synthesis), slows down recovery (cortisol + dehydration), and disrupts your restorative sleep. It's the number one enemy of your gains!
How many glasses of alcohol can you have while weight training and exercising?
Scientific research shows that there is no "safe" level of alcohol for athletes looking to optimise their muscle gains. Even moderate consumption can have negative effects on protein synthesis and muscle recovery, with impacts that intensify as the amount consumed increases
📊 What studies teach us
Scientific research (see below) in this area shows that alcohol interferes with muscle growth processeseven at relatively low doses. For example, some studies have observed a reduction in muscle protein synthesis of up to 30% after post-training alcohol consumption.
💡 Context of research: Most studies have focused on binge drinking equivalents among athletes, which is around 1 to 1.5g of alcohol per kg of body weight. To give you an idea, this would represent approximately 5 to 8 standard drinks for a man weighing 80kg.
📈 A dose-dependent relationship
The effects of alcohol on your muscles follow a dose-dependent relationship. In other words:
ℹ️ Important note: These effects can vary from person to person. Factors such as your genetics, gender, or individual tolerance to alcohol come into play
🎯 How to balance fitness and social life without sabotaging your gains?
To minimise the negative effects of alcohol on your athletic performance, Moderation and timing are crucial. Here are some practical tips to help you find a balance between your social life and your fitness goals:
🏆 Don't forget: If you want to be the best (BE A 10), forget about alcohol.
Will giving up alcohol help you put on muscle?
Stopping alcohol can indeed enhance your muscle gain and improve your performance. Not only do you optimise protein synthesis, but you also significantly enhance the quality of your sleep, a key factor in recovery and muscle growth
💪 The muscular benefits of sobriety
By saying goodbye to alcohol, you're giving your muscles the ideal environment in which to develop. Your body becomes a true muscle-building powerhousewithout the brakes imposed by ethanol. Here's what you can expect:
⚡ Champion-level performance and lightning-fast recovery
Giving up alcohol is like giving your entire body a boost. Expect:
🔬 Now that you know how stopping alcohol can turn your body into a muscle-building machine, you might be wondering what exactly the white coats say about it…
Effects of Alcohol on Metabolism and Muscle Building
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Effects of alcohol on mTORC1 signalling after exercise
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