ZoMbSta
Member
This says the Upper Tolerable Limit is 10,00 IU
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Thanks! 10,000 i.u? That's just the amount from my daily multi. Doesn't leave any room for cod liver oil at all?
This says the Upper Tolerable Limit is 10,00 IU
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Wow, this is a long thread.
I take fish oil only because I rarely end up eating fish. Love fish, rarely eat it = a little fishy oil from Costco.
The stuff is not magic, and Poliquin's rec's are more based in fairytales than science.
Christian Thibadeau also has talked about the effects of body comp change that megadosing has...he has said it makes a HUGE difference much more than any other supplement in his arsenal has.....
you mean that fish oil doesn't have as amazing an effect as the results shown by poliquin?
EasyEJL said:I can also show where professional dieticians have with the aid of scientific evidence recommended for then against then for then against eating whole eggs. There was a point where dieticians believed that dietary cholesterol raised serum cholesterol, which we now know is false.
K said:A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it. Fifteen hundred years ago everybody knew the Earth was the center of the universe. Five hundred years ago, everybody knew the Earth was flat, and fifteen minutes ago, you knew that humans were alone on this planet. Imagine what you'll know tomorrow.
....and also I keep hearing this rumor that he injected with steroids....maybe he did...but I am an avid reader of T-mag and unless you could supply maybe the link where it said it...I would stop spreading a rumor that has been spoken on here before just because someone else said it...
thats all well and good to say, but I can also show where professional dieticians have with the aid of scientific evidence recommended for then against then for then against eating whole eggs. There was a point where dieticians believed that dietary cholesterol raised serum cholesterol, which we now know is false.
So I take any of what anyone says with a grain of salt.
I can say for a fact that I like the way I feel and get better results in the gym when I am taking 10g + of fish oil a day more than when I don't, and thats about all that is really important to me.
Realise man...Christian is not massivley huge by any stretch...so what would incline you to say he used injectables....secondly also realise when you look at his before and after pics....he had been training and a strength coach for years at that point and had a layer of fat over it all..I can understand this cause although when I was in college based upon my calipers at 5'11 I would have been 225 at 8-10% BF but nonetheless you could not tell it by looking at me cause I had 50 pounds of extra fat covering it over and would not have know I was that muscular aside from that I looked solid....
Yup, true.Alan would know...that is his area of expertise...Poliquin usually picks a different supplement every six months to fall in love w/ and mega-dose. At one time Ginko was his favorite megadose sup...
to add, the fact that there isn't published in a journal scientific evidence does not mean there isn't scientific evidence.
Like Bioman mentioned, the burden of proof is not on the scientist, but rather, it's on the person making the claim. If fish oil megadosing causes these magical results (take fat loss for example), then we'd see it happen under placebo-controlled conditions. Anyone can get a hold of a supp that they truly believe deep down will work miracles, and guess what? The compliance, consistency, dedication, & flat-out work ethic is kicked up several notches, and next thing you know.... AMAZING RESULTS. How much did the supp actually contribute? Very little (if anything at all) on its own, but a whole hell of a lot in terms of setting off the placebo cascade. As it stands in the scientific literature, fish oil's effect on fat loss has been either nonexistent, or minor at best.Hmm is there placebo controlled proof it doesnt work? if not then the best you can really say is you don't know, and if there is i'd like to see a link to it.
Yeah, the placebo effects can definitely be enormous. I posted an article about that, comically a more expensive placebo outperforms a discounted placebo.
I can only say that I like the way I feel better when I am taking 10+g of fish oil a day vs when I am taking less than that. Hard to tell for sure what the real health benefits are.
no wonder i feel so depressed when I stop taking fish oil![]()
Fish Oil as a Fat Loss Supplement?If your soo keen on showing us fact then why not post some studies showing that megadosing is nothing else than placebo effect....
Heres some more info...
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Knowledge is servant to experiencing
In the most recent fish oil + exercise study to date, Hill’s team examined the effect of fish oil supplementation (6g) on overweight hypertensive/hyperlipidemic subjects (24 men and 41 women) over a 12 week period [18]. Exercise was 3 days/week walking at 75% predicted maximal heart rate for 45 minutes. Body composition was assessed by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA). Predictably, fish oil supplementation improved blood lipids and arterial vasodilation. As for body composition, fish oil by itself didn’t cause any bodyfat reduction from baseline levels, whereas the sunflower oil control gained bodyfat , but to an insignificant degree. However, fish oil + exercise caused a 1.1% greater bodyfat reduction compared to the sunflower oil + exercise control (1.2% reduction versus a 0.1% reduction in the sunflower oil group). If you re-read those body composition results, they’re nothing to get too excited over, especially considering the small amount of fat lost in the 12 week duration.
Collectively, the research indicates that fish oil's fat loss effect is minor to nonexistent.
Results: FO supplementation lowered triacylglycerols, increased HDL cholesterol, and improved endothelium-dependent arterial vasodilation (P < 0.05). Exercise improved arterial compliance (P < 0.05). Both fish oil and exercise independently reduced body fat (P < 0.05).
Conclusions: FO supplements and regular exercise both reduce body fat and improve cardiovascular and metabolic health. Increasing intake of n–3 FAs could be a useful adjunct to exercise programs aimed at improving body composition and decreasing cardiovascular disease risk.
In some trials, fat loss as a result of fish oil has been nonexistent. In this particular trial, it was minor. 3 lbs in 12 weeks is FAR from magical progress, in fact, it's pretty damn poor. Add to this the fact that the participants' dietary intake was self-reported, not lab-provided. Bottom line, a 1.1% fat loss advantage seen over placebo within a 12 week period = nothing exciting at all. Definitely not the magic bullet people make FO out to be. I should also mention that the exercising control group in this study consumed an average of 30g more carbs per day than the fish oil group, and more calories overall.Here is a link to Allison Hill's thesis including this information, submitted for her doctorate, which tells a very different story, specifically finding that fish oil does directly by itself at 6g a day reduce body fat levels.
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this particular graph from within it tells a bit of it right there. Yes the fish oil with no exercise group appears to have lost no fat and gained no muscle, the placebo group reciving sunflower oil gained close to a kilogram of fat while losing half a kg of muscle tissue. And including exercise, the fish oil group added more lean mass than any of the other groups, and lost around 1.5kg of bodyfat.
This is with NO change in caloric intake between the groups - the fish oil + exercise group had the same caloric intake as the sunflower + exercise group.
So it seems to me to be a total fallacy to say that at the same caloric intake level loosing more than 3lbs in 12 weeks is insignifcant. Thats the equivalent of around 125 calories a day differential from taking fish oil. If most of the US could do the same, the current obesity epidemic would disappear in a year or two, as 3 lbs in 12 weeks translates to 12 lbs in a year.
What's up Jerry!Hi Alan![]()
I presented/discussed several trials on fish oil & fat loss. Nowhere in my article did I deny that FO had some effect in some trials. You need to read what I posted more carefully before you accuse me of misstating anything.Interesting that you used a study that does support that it is effective, to write an article to say how it wasn't. Could you explain that please? It seems to me a bias on your behalf, to purposefully misstate the findings published in a peer reviewed journal.
In some trials, fat loss as a result of fish oil has been nonexistent. In this particular trial, it was minor. 3 lbs in 12 weeks is FAR from magical progress, in fact, it's pretty damn poor. Add to this the fact that the participants' dietary intake was self-reported, not lab-provided. Bottom line, a 1.1% fat loss advantage seen over placebo within a 12 week period = nothing exciting at all. Definitely not the magic bullet people make FO out to be. I should also mention that the exercising control group in this study consumed an average of 30g more carbs per day than the fish oil group, and more calories overall.