Einband:
Kartonierter Einband
Untertitel:
How to Match Your Food and Fitness to Your Unique Female Physiology for Optimum Performance, Great Health, and a Strong, Lean Body for Life
Autor:
Stacy Sims, Selene Yeager
Herausgeber:
Random House LLC US
Erscheinungsdatum:
15.12.2023
Informationen zum Autor Dr. Stacy Sims , MSc, PhD, is an exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist. She has directed research programs at Stanford, Auckland University of Technology, and the University of Waikato, focusing on female athlete health and performance. Her contributions to the international research environment and the sports nutrition industry have created a new niche in sports nutrition and established her reputation as the expert in sex differences in training, nutrition, and health. Dr. Sims is in high demand for her Women Are Not Small Men lectures. She is a regularly featured speaker at professional and academic conferences and serves on the advisory board of several high-impact companies. Klappentext "Originally published in different form in the United States by Rodale Books, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, in 2016"--Title page verso. Leseprobe 1 What It Means to Be Like a Girl All the Physiological Stuff That Makes Females Unique You throw like a girl. You run like a girl. The like a girl insult has been so ubiquitous, such a strong underlying current in our culture, that in 2015, Always, one of the biggest makers of feminine hygiene products, stole the show during the Super Bowl with a 60-second ad spot that challenged the culture to dismantle the phrase with its Like A Girl campaign, which turns the insult into an inspirational compliment. You saw what it can mean to compete like a girl in the introductionhow women can dominate their sport. Look, I'm not one to sugarcoat anything, so I'll give it to you straight. Yes, in head-to-head objective physical performance comparisons, females may have some disadvantages compared to males. We also have some distinct advantages, but you never hear about those. So let's set the stage here with a complete look at your female physiology in action. Sugar and Spice and Everything Nice: What We're Really Made Of No surprise: Women tend to be smaller and lighter and have a higher portion of body fat (hello breasts, hips, and all things childbearing!) than men. But dig a little deeper, and the comparisons become more interesting and revealing. First, let's talk about body mass and how it's distributed. Our mass is the stuff we're made of, which everyone commonly refers to as weightthe number you see on the scale. That's not exactly accurate. For one, technically, weight is determined by gravitational pull, so you'd weigh less on the moon and far more on Jupiter, but that's being picky. The more important factor is that the number you see on the scaleyour weightfluctuates widely depending on fluid intake, what you've eaten during the day, salt intake, and how much glycogen you're storing in your muscles. (For every 1 gram of glycogen, you store 3 grams of water; as you get fitter, you become better at glycogen storage. So before a big event, you can gain 5 or more pounds that you will blow through during your eventbut you haven't gained or lost any fat.) Body mass, by contrast, is the actual stuff you're made ofbone, muscle, fat, and organsthat requires tissue loss or gain and is harder to change. We'll cover bones in Chapter 9, because a strong skeleton is essential for vibrant living, and women's bones are vulnerable to getting brittle. For now, however, let's focus on muscle and fat. When researchers take core needles and pull out a column of muscle tissue from the designated muscle of interest (usually the shoulder, biceps, or quadriceps) of men and women, the findings might surprise you: There's not much difference. Men and women generally have the same muscle composition as far as the percentage of type I endurance (aerobic) fibers and type II power (anaerobic) fibers. What is different is that the largest fibers in women's bodies tend to be type I endurance fibers, while in men the type II p...
Autorentext
Dr. Stacy Sims, MSc, PhD, is an exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist. She has directed research programs at Stanford, Auckland University of Technology, and the University of Waikato, focusing on female athlete health and performance. Her contributions to the international research environment and the sports nutrition industry have created a new niche in sports nutrition and established her reputation as the expert in sex differences in training, nutrition, and health. Dr. Sims is in high demand for her “Women Are Not Small Men” lectures. She is a regularly featured speaker at professional and academic conferences and serves on the advisory board of several high-impact companies.
Klappentext
"The groundbreaking book that revolutionized exercise nutrition and performance for female athletes, now freshly updated"--
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