things that will aid if a fight.....?
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10-11-2008 07:26 AM
Registered User
things that will aid if a fight.....?
i fight alot, is there anything that i can take that will help my endurance and focus in a fight??
it has to work though because im gunna use it as a crutch for when i need it!
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10-11-2008 08:14 AM
Registered User
Caffeine, Phenylpiracetam,PEA, etc. Google it.
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10-11-2008 08:21 AM
Registered User
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10-11-2008 09:08 AM
Registered User
Taking Trans-Resveratrol can help with a myraid of benefits. Enduarnce is partially a factor of overall health.
It has been shown to be able to increases cardiovascular endurance and efficiency. Resveratrol seems to boost muscle endurance by increasing the amount and production of mitochondria you have and hence you will make more energy if you recall your high school bio class.
Also, it may help modify your muscle fibers to become more type 1 dominant and hence a higher proportion in endurance type fibers.
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10-11-2008 09:14 AM
Registered User
Originally Posted by
just93
i fight alot, is there anything that i can take that will help my endurance and focus in a fight??
it has to work though because im gunna use it as a crutch for when i need it!
probably a treadmill and if u can't be focused with a guy standing across from you ready to beat the crap out of you, then maybe fighting isn't your thing
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10-11-2008 09:14 AM
Registered User
supplement wise i'd say some good complex carbs an hour before the fight and some beta alanine and extend
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10-11-2008 09:55 AM
Registered User
Originally Posted by
small_guy
Taking Trans-Resveratrol can help with a myraid of benefits. Enduarnce is partially a factor of overall health.
It has been shown to be able to increases cardiovascular endurance and efficiency. Resveratrol seems to boost muscle endurance by increasing the amount and production of mitochondria you have and hence you will make more energy if you recall your high school bio class.
Also, it may help modify your muscle fibers to become more type 1 dominant and hence a higher proportion in endurance type fibers.
resveratrol modifying muscle fibers? i don't think thats possible
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10-11-2008 10:15 AM
Registered User
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10-11-2008 10:27 AM
Registered User
Originally Posted by
jsp0785
resveratrol modifying muscle fibers? i don't think thats possible
read this-
http://www.lifeenhancement.net/artic...te.asp?ID=1799
And pay attention to this point
Resveratrol Provides “Training” without Exercise
How did the researchers explain all these improbable facts, causing the “cloak” that Galileo spoke of to be dropped? They did it through meticulous molecular biological studies carried out on tissues from the resveratrol-supplemented mice. In brief, their explanation goes like this: resveratrol stimulates the expression of the longevity gene SIRT1 (this had been known for several years), which codes for the protein SIRT1. The actions of SIRT1 are those of a deacetylase, meaning that it removes acetyl groups from proteins that have them in certain places in their molecular structure. SIRT1 performs this function on (among others) a protein called PGC-1α, which controls mitochondrial biogenesis and function; PGC-1α is thus a strong arbiter of cellular energy metabolism. When this protein is deacetylated, its biological activity increases, and so do mitochondrial number and function.
The result (as seen in the mice) is greatly enhanced physical capability in the absence of increased physical activity (i.e., exercise). This enhancement is induced in part by an increase in the proportion of “oxidative” muscle fibers, the type with the greatest capacity to carry oxygen and sustain aerobic activity (such a conversion of one type of muscle fiber to another type is called remodeling). Oxidative fibers are the type of muscle fiber that maximizes endurance and is found abundantly in trained athletes.
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10-11-2008 10:34 AM
Registered User
Originally Posted by
small_guy
read this-
http://www.lifeenhancement.net/artic...te.asp?ID=1799
And pay attention to this point
Resveratrol Provides “Training” without Exercise
How did the researchers explain all these improbable facts, causing the “cloak” that Galileo spoke of to be dropped? They did it through meticulous molecular biological studies carried out on tissues from the resveratrol-supplemented mice. In brief, their explanation goes like this: resveratrol stimulates the expression of the longevity gene SIRT1 (this had been known for several years), which codes for the protein SIRT1. The actions of SIRT1 are those of a deacetylase, meaning that it removes acetyl groups from proteins that have them in certain places in their molecular structure. SIRT1 performs this function on (among others) a protein called PGC-1α, which controls mitochondrial biogenesis and function; PGC-1α is thus a strong arbiter of cellular energy metabolism. When this protein is deacetylated, its biological activity increases, and so do mitochondrial number and function.
The result (as seen in the mice) is greatly enhanced physical capability in the absence of increased physical activity (i.e., exercise). This enhancement is induced in part by an increase in the proportion of “oxidative” muscle fibers, the type with the greatest capacity to carry oxygen and sustain aerobic activity (such a conversion of one type of muscle fiber to another type is called remodeling). Oxidative fibers are the type of muscle fiber that maximizes endurance and is found abundantly in trained athletes.
i kind of stand corrected
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10-11-2008 11:05 PM
Sponsor
Originally Posted by
small_guy
read this-
http://www.lifeenhancement.net/artic...te.asp?ID=1799
And pay attention to this point
Resveratrol Provides “Training” without Exercise
How did the researchers explain all these improbable facts, causing the “cloak” that Galileo spoke of to be dropped? They did it through meticulous molecular biological studies carried out on tissues from the resveratrol-supplemented mice. In brief, their explanation goes like this: resveratrol stimulates the expression of the longevity gene SIRT1 (this had been known for several years), which codes for the protein SIRT1. The actions of SIRT1 are those of a deacetylase, meaning that it removes acetyl groups from proteins that have them in certain places in their molecular structure. SIRT1 performs this function on (among others) a protein called PGC-1α, which controls mitochondrial biogenesis and function; PGC-1α is thus a strong arbiter of cellular energy metabolism. When this protein is deacetylated, its biological activity increases, and so do mitochondrial number and function.
The result (as seen in the mice) is greatly enhanced physical capability in the absence of increased physical activity (i.e., exercise). This enhancement is induced in part by an increase in the proportion of “oxidative” muscle fibers, the type with the greatest capacity to carry oxygen and sustain aerobic activity (such a conversion of one type of muscle fiber to another type is called remodeling). Oxidative fibers are the type of muscle fiber that maximizes endurance and is found abundantly in trained athletes.
That's hot.
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10-11-2008 11:29 PM
Registered User
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10-12-2008 06:57 PM
Registered User
Originally Posted by
just93
i fight alot, is there anything that i can take that will help my endurance and focus in a fight??
it has to work though because im gunna use it as a crutch for when i need it!
A gun.....
J/K
Yohimbe makes me aggressive and increases my focus.
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