Dez Bryant gets rehydrated before the Cowboys' preseason game in Oakland. (USA TODAY Sports)
Swishing
a sports drink around in your mouth and then spitting it out might
sound like a nonsensical way to boost performance, but it's been nearly a
decade since research first suggested that rinsing improves your
workout. A study by sports scientists at University of Central Lancashire this April found that during an hour-long workout, cyclists who swished carbohydrate-rich sports drinks for longer covered more distance and felt less tired than after a five-second rinse or rinsing with water.
How the trick works may surprise
you. Brain scans show that specific regions light up when carbs are in
your mouth. The longer you rinse, the more time the carbs have to
stimulate sensors in your brain, says study author Lindsay Bottoms. "The concept of mouth rinse supports the idea that the brain is very much playing a key role in fatigue," says Bottoms.
Swishing is most beneficial
during relatively short, intense workouts. Not only can the rinse give
you a performance boost of about 2 percent, but it also helps avoid
indigestion from swallowing carbs during workouts. "When performing
high-intensity exercise lasting less than 60 minutes, using a
carbohydrate rinse for 5-10 seconds can improve performance," says
Bottoms. "It could potentially allow you to train harder." If you're
doing a couple hours of exercise, however, rinsing will start to lose
its effect since your muscles really do need more carbs.
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