Our monthly newsletters cover a variety of nutrition-related training topics, often emphasizing plant-based approaches for optimizing running performance and overall health. Become a member to access our in-depth repository on optimising your vegan nutrition for running performance. Some of our newsletter coverage is summerised below.
The B12 article in the August 2025 Newsletter stresses that Vitamin B12 supplementation is mandatory for all plant-based eaters because the nutrient is produced by bacteria, not plants, and deficiency can lead to severe issues like neurological damage and fatigue.
For runners, B12 is described as the "lubricant for a finely-tuned machine," acting as a crucial cofactor in converting carbohydrates and fats into ATP, the primary energy source for muscles. Adequate B12 intake translates directly to enhanced energy production and endurance, helping to ward off fatigue during exercise.
B12 supports optimal oxygen delivery by stimulating red blood cell production and ensures sharp nerve function vital for coordination and efficient running form.
To achieve optimal functional status, general adult runners are typically advised to take either 50 micrograms daily or 2,000 micrograms of cyanocobalamin once per week. Individuals over 50, regardless of diet, should ensure a reliable B12 source, with a recommendation for a high daily dose of 1,000 micrograms.
Understanding Omega-3s: Focuses on eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), noting that the body's conversion of ALA (from plant sources like flaxseeds, chia seeds, hemp seeds, and walnuts) to EPA and DHA is limited.
Potential Performance Benefits: Discusses how omega-3s may improve oxygen utilization by acting as vasodilators, enhance running economy (especially for lower-level athletes), reduce perceived exertion, and accelerate recovery by decreasing delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) and oxidative stress.
Vegan Considerations: Highlights the higher risk of deficiency for vegans due to the absence of fish in their diet.
Heart Health: Emphasizes their importance for cardiovascular efficiency, reducing inflammation, lowering triglycerides, preventing arrhythmias, and regulating blood pressure.
Practical Tips: Recommends boosting ALA intake (1-2 tablespoons of flaxseed oil or 2-3 tablespoons of ground flaxseeds daily, aiming for 3-5g ALA), considering algae-based EPA/DHA supplements (200-500 mg daily), timing intake with meals containing healthy fats, and monitoring levels with an Omega-3 Index blood test.
Ideal Meal Focus: Advises on balancing taste with performance, highlighting the pitfalls of restaurant meals often loaded with dietary FOG (fats, oil, and grease) and high salt.
Impact of Saturated Fat: Explains that even a single high-saturated fat meal can negatively affect endurance by delaying digestion, increasing inflammation, and impairing vascular health and endothelial function.
Nitric Oxide (NO): Discusses how saturated fats can impair the endothelium's ability to produce NO, a potent vasodilator that increases blood flow and oxygen delivery to muscles, which is crucial for performance.
Recommended Foods: Suggests low-salt, FOG-free options like grains (buckwheat, quinoa), salads with balsamic vinegar (no dressing), plain white flour pasta with grilled tomatoes and vegan pesto, and easily accessible items like cooked beets and white bagels when traveling.
Seasonal Deficiency: Addresses "Seasonal Performance Variation" due to reduced sunlight exposure, leading to deficiencies peaking around March, especially in northern hemispheres.
Benefits for Runners: Explains Vitamin D's critical role in muscle function (ATP synthesis, mitochondrial efficiency, strength, power, endurance), bone health (calcium absorption, preventing stress fractures), and immune support.
Supplementation: Recommends 2,000-4,000 IU per day for athletes, cautioning against exceeding 100 micrograms (4,000 IU) without medical advice.
Deficiency Impacts: Symptoms include muscle weakness, fatigue, and slower recovery, potentially causing a 1-3% decrease in performance.
Supporting Nutrients: Briefly notes the abundance of Vitamin C in plant-based diets and stresses the importance of magnesium for Vitamin D activation and metabolism, and Vitamin K2 (from leafy greens or supplements) for calcium incorporation into bones.
General Supplements: Mentions Dr. Michael Gregor's recommended supplements (algae-based Omega 3, Vitamin D, Vitamin B12).
Specific Compound: Introduces a well-researched, legal, and beneficial natural compound (name withheld in source) that can improve muscle strength, lean body mass (especially with resistance training in older people), brain performance, and potentially increase lifespan. It's noted to be particularly beneficial for vegans and older athletes.
Mitochondrial Health Overview: Part of a series, this section explains that mitochondrial health, quantity, and efficiency are highly variable and significantly influenced by diet, directly impacting endurance and recovery. A highly trained, well-nourished athlete can have significantly more and more efficient mitochondria.
Whole-Food Vegan Diet Benefits: A diverse, nutrient-packed plant-based diet supports mitochondrial biogenesis (creation of new mitochondria), efficiency, and mitophagy (cleaning damaged mitochondria).
Harmful Diets: High-fat diets, especially combined with high glucose, can lead to mitochondrial fragmentation and insulin resistance.
Key Plant-Based Compounds: Identifies Polyphenols, Soybeans (via Genistein), Cacao Beans, Nitrate-Rich Vegetables (beets, spinach, arugula, Swiss chard, celery, green lettuce), Ellagic Acid & Urolithin A (from yellow raspberries, pomegranates, strawberries, walnuts), Omega-3 Fatty Acids (plant-based sources), and Short-Chain Fatty Acids (from insoluble fiber) as beneficial for mitochondrial health.
Essential Nutrients: Highlights the need for Co-Enzyme Q10 (CoQ10), quercetin, NAD+, L-carnitine, creatine, PQQ, and B vitamins, easily obtained from a diverse whole-food vegan diet.
Gut-Mitochondria Connection: Explains that gut microbes produce compounds that influence mitochondrial function, emphasizing the link between gut health and performance.
Methionine: Cautions against high dietary methionine (mostly in animal products) which can harm mitochondria, suggesting a balanced vegan diet can inherently provide a methionine-restricted environment.
Daily Checklist: Provides practical tips like focusing on diversity, including berries, pomegranates, leafy greens, beets, soy, cacao, healthy fats, and fiber-rich/fermented foods.
Concept: Explores how diet can impact the body's acidity (pH value), suggesting that an excess of acidic foods impairs muscle performance and contributes to fatigue, while maximizing body alkalinity through dietary choices can offer benefits.
Benefits: Favors anaerobic boost for shorter distances (400m-5000m) by reducing acid build-up and increasing bicarbonate buffer. Also suggests improved fuel efficiency through enhanced fat burning at slower paces.
Research Findings: Discusses various studies from 2015 to 2024, noting mixed evidence but also improvements in 400m sprint times and longer-term benefits on body composition and aerobic performance when an alkaline diet is combined with exercise. Highlights a Lithuanian study showing high-protein diets in athletes can cause acid-base imbalances.
Vegan Alignment: Notes that vegan diets naturally align with alkaline eating principles, but cautions against consuming alcohol, tea, coffee, and processed foods which can negate benefits.
Watermelon: Promotes its consumption for hydration (92% water), electrolyte replacement (potassium, magnesium), carbohydrate source for energy, antioxidant content (Vitamin C, lycopene), and citrulline, an amino acid that may reduce muscle soreness and improve blood flow.
Beetroot: Recommends daily consumption for its nitrate content, which enhances vascular endothelial function and offers both chronic and time-limited endurance benefits.
Provides an example of advice from VEG3 AI for an ideal vegan meal before a 10k race: high in complex carbohydrates, moderate protein, low in fat and fiber, with examples like whole grain pasta, brown rice, quinoa, lentils, chickpeas, steamed vegetables, and fruit, emphasizing familiar foods.
Reiterates the negative impact of fats on endothelial function due to high-fat meals impairing blood vessel dilation, reducing blood flow, and increasing inflammation and blood viscosity.
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Proveg provide a simple guide for athletes on fuelling for performance and long term health and links to 22 references.
Check out our interactive page on the Benefits of Plant Powered Running
Articles, recipes, podcasts and more.
A concise guide on multiple benefits of going plant based from the Plant Based Health Professionals UK.
World Class Iron Man, Rich Roll, interviews experts starting with plant based UK Doctor Gemma Newman on how to adopt and thrive on a plant based diet as an athlete. This November 2022 video covers the latest research and wisdom shared by physicians & experts.
A handy four page PDF that is information rich on how best to get the most from a plant based diet in your running persuits.
The Physician's Committee study published in the journal Nutrients found that plant-based athletes benefit from improvements in heart health, performance, and recovery.
This free ebook compiles research findings on plant based diets for athletes.
a great source for vegan athlete nutrition and training guides. See also this trailer for the film "Why I Could Never Go Vegan"
Switch4Good provides a series of guides on the benefits for ditching dairy.
It’s perfectly possible to get everything you need from a healthy and balanced vegan diet, no matter your age or energy requirements. The Vegan Society has put together key facts including benefits of going plant-based and an overview of their work with the British Dietetic Association.
Dr. Michael Gregor in his book ‘How Not To Die’ explains why four dietary supplements are suggested for optimal health for vegans and non-vegan alike. These included algae based Omega 3 (DHA), Vitamin D and Vitamin B12. Readers also learn the pitfalls of self administering non-prescribed mineral and vitamin supplementation such as Vitamin E.
Many elite endurance athletes engage in dietary supplementation for improved performance. This leads to research in determining the ideal combination, dosage and timing of supplements. There are many products marketed with unproven benefits and are not well researched.
What if there is one well researched supplement that many (circa 70%) elite athletes use? Athletes from various disciplines, including strength and power sports, team sports, and even endurance sports, use this product to enhance performance, improve recovery, and increase muscle mass and strength.
This substance did even get a mention in 2015 when ‘How Not to Die’ was published. However eight years later in ‘How Not To Age’ in the discussion of muscle wastage with aging we learn that high protein diets and amino acid supplementation are an ineffective remedy in the treatment of sarcopenia. But there was a natural compound that made the grade and when consumed alongside resistance training in older people the resulting increase in muscle strength and lean body mass was significant. Back in 2015 the research was unclear but now all that has changed. What’s more, in mice the supplementation of this compound increased lifespan by 9%.
Not only that, what if this supplement seems to be more beneficial for vegans and helpful for older athletes (that might be as young as thirty). It’s impactful on both men and women. Moreover it also seems to improve brain performance, including working memory and intelligence tasks requiring rapid processing?
Let’s emphasize that it’s well researched, legal and seems to have no detrimental side effects after regular consumption of recommended dosage for over five years.
Are you curious? Join up to read more on this topic in our members area.
An array of information on meal plans, workout nutrition and the supplements.
A free 35 page PDF with meal plans and two running guides from Higher Running. The 6 Day Plant-Based Meal Plan has 18 Recipes, Grocery and Prep Lists and Cooking Tips by health coach Becky Hill.
plus Intermediate Base Building Plan to build up endurance and speed in 6 weeks by progressively building their “aerobic base”.
Mic the Vegan runs through the development and reasoning culminating in these latest rational conclusions.
The most comprehensive synopsis of nutrition science in easily digestible video chunks.
Plant-based health professionals UK provides education and advocacy on whole food plant-based nutrition for the prevention and treatment of chronic disease, as well as for supporting planetary health.
Packed with free practical resources plus courses and other references.