Snippet #018: Fiber Increases Gastric Volume to Optimize Body Composition
The Mechanism
Severe energy deficits increase fatigue and physiological stress, often negating the theoretical benefits of improved power-to-weight ratios.
Dietary fiber alters this dynamic by reducing the energy density of meals. Fiber increases gastric volume and viscosity, physically distending the stomach and triggering mechanoreceptors without adding significant metabolizable energy.
This mechanism enhances satiety signaling via vagal afferents. Athletes can maintain a mild energy deficit to alter body composition while mitigating the orexigenic (hunger) responses that typically impair recovery and training capacity.
The Training Consequence
- Prioritizing low-energy-density food matrices (legumes, whole grains) allows for high-volume food intake during off-season or base phases.
- This strategy attenuates the link between caloric restriction and perceived deprivation, preserving the psychological and physiological availability required for high-quality training sessions.

Boundary
Data in this context are primarily derived from comparative studies on elite race walkers undergoing short-term caloric restriction versus high-energy availability protocols.
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Disclaimer
The information provided in this newsletter is for educational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Exercise physiology is highly individual; what works for elite populations may not apply to everyone. Always consult with a physician before making significant changes to your training, nutrition, or supplementation protocols. The Scientist's Notebook and ESQ Coaching accept no liability for injuries or health issues arising from the application of these concepts.
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