Hank Vangut
Well-known member
Hank did you change your avy? I swear your pants just dropped an inch :lol:
lol. yeah, a&f demanded i lower my pants an inch for that fierce cologne ad.
Hank did you change your avy? I swear your pants just dropped an inch :lol:
Hank you are seriously making me consider your way of nutrition. Even if its just a trial run. Im very intrigued by this method of yours.
glad you approve of the program. the guy who gave it to me was banned from here because he was a big taint poster.
i had a similar pwo discussion on a different forum not too long ago.
your premise is based on the need of an insulin spike to shuttle nutrients into the muscles.
eating a big meal of solid protein and/or fat will also significantly increase insulin levels on their own....especially in someone who is in good shape with great insulin sensitivity.
lol. yeah, a&f demanded i lower my pants an inch for that fierce cologne ad.
I'm with hank on this one in the fact that it seems as though recently "broscience" has gotten a bad rep. There is reason for that however the underlying aspect of it is that "you do what works for you". Hank is doing what works for him, and in my experience a somewhat similar protocol also works for myself (forever adjusting obviously).
Always a good discussion though.
Anyway lets give Hankster back his log.
Are you running a new log without me !!
Fashionably late...where are my mannersAre you running a new log without me !!
good discussion. yeah, i'm not opposed to some hijacking in my logs. it makes it fun.![]()
really?:think: ok. back on to the log.Peeing with a "bed sword" can actually damage the penis. I'm not sure why I thought to share that, but just be carefull!
:thumbsup:
I'm with hank on this one in the fact that it seems as though recently "broscience" has gotten a bad rep. There is reason for that however the underlying aspect of it is that "you do what works for you". Hank is doing what works for him, and in my experience a somewhat similar protocol also works for myself (forever adjusting obviously).
Always a good discussion though.
Wouldnt you think that ingesting the aminos periworkout would be more valuable so they can make it thru stomach walls and into bloodstream by the time workout is done?
Leucine, if ingested post workout has an effect at inducing augmented release of insulin, (I do believe). However, that's about as deep as I can get on that, in what pathways, how and why, ?no se? (you like the authentic double question mark? I took Spanish in high school).
I don't believe powder leucine has to work that hard to get into the blood stream.
Does leucine ‘alone’ stimulate insulin secretion and is this how it exerts its effects on protein synthesis?
Studies are conflicting as some have found no increase in insulin when leucine is administered alone, while others have. To clarify Dr. Anthony and colleagues measured insulin levels immediately after leucine administration and found that it increased insulin from 15-45 minutes. Thus it appears that it does increase insulin transiently and that measuring insulin after this time frame will not yield significant increases.
In order to investigate if insulin modulates leucine’s effects, scientists will either block the action of insulin, or block insulin release. When this occurs leucine’s effects on protein synthesis are partly but not fully hindered. Recall that leucine increases S6, which is the ribosomal protein responsible for increasing the capacity of a cell to conduct protein synthesis. This is completely blocked when insulin is hindered. Leucine also enhances the initiation of translation (the initiation stage of protein synthesis) and this is only partly blocked when insulin is hindered. Thus, leucine has both insulin dependent and insulin independent effects on protein synthesis.
How much insulin is needed in order for leucine’s effects on protein synthesis to be maximized?
Leucine can maximally stimulate protein synthesis at fasting levels of insulin, and perhaps at slightly lower levels than this! Therefore spiking insulin levels for the purpose of enhancing leucines effects on protein synthesis do not appear to be necessary. Currently scientists are divided. Either insulin plays a supportive or passive role in supporting leucines effects on protein synthesis, or a direct role. Either way this is maximized at low levels.
Can insulin stimulate protein synthesis independent of leucine and other amino acids?
Insulin administered alone does not appear to have an effect on protein synthesis. The rationale is that insulin increases uptake of amino acids and therefore lowers their concentration in the blood when given alone. Extracellular amino acid levels are critical for protein synthesis to occur. However, when amino acid levels are maintained insulin may be able to stimulate protein synthesis when it is at extremely high levels. This is confirmed in studies which administer either insulin alone, or carbohydrates alone. No protein synthesis is stimulated and the individual remains in a muscle wasting condition. In contrast when amino acid levels are maintained protein synthesis is stimulated when insulin is raised to very high levels.
However, insulin potently decreases protein breakdown, independently of amino acids. In fact it is considered the main player in decreasing protein breakdown, but individuals remain in negative protein balance without aminos.
Can insulin and leucine work together in a synergistic fashion to increase muscle growth?
Like leucine, insulin appears to elicit its actions on protein synthesis through an mTOR dependent mechanism, as well as mTOR independent mechanisms. When leucine and insulin are combined their effects on increasing a cell’s capacity for protein synthesis are synergistic. This means that if insulin increases the capacity of a cell to increase protein synthesis 2 fold, and so does leucine, combined their effects are greater than 4 fold.
The current rationale is that insulin actually increases blood flow to muscle tissue, which if combined with increasing levels of amino acids (particularly leucine ) would increase amino acid concentrations and delivery to muscle tissue, thereby amplifying their effects.
Insulin increases blood flow + increased leucine à greater concentration of leucine surrounding muscle tissue à amplified effects on protein synthesis.
It is also important to note that as stated, leucine alone either does not or only transiently increases plasma insulin levels. Yet, when combined with insulin, it actually notably increases plasma insulin levels. The rationale is that insulin is cleared primarily through degradation (e.g. it is broken down like other proteins). Because leucine has anticatabolic effects, it may decrease insulin clearance levels.
Can you discuss more of the effects of insulin on protein breakdown?
Yes,
White leucine is the primary regulator of protein synthesis, insulin is the primary regulator of protein breakdown in that it decreases it by hindering pathways responsible for protein breakdown.
In an intriguing study participants were given one of three drinks after exercise. The first was a glucose drink, the second combined whey protein with glucose, while the third added leucine to the glucose / whey serving. Results indicated that protein balance was negative in the first condition, became positive in the glucose / whey condition, and increased again when leucine was added.
Here’s the interesting fact. Protein balance appeared to increase with increasing insulin levels. Finally they analyzed the relationship (correlation) between leucine and protein synthesis and insulin and protein synthesis. They found that leucine was positively related to protein synthesis (as leucine increases protein synthesis does as well), while insulin was not significantly correlated. However, insulin was inversely correlated to protein breakdown, meaning when insulin levels rise, protein breakdown decreases.
For practical applications on how to manipulate carbohydrates for insulin release see the following papers
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Both exercise and leucine stimulate protein synthesis. Is there any time differences between the two?
Yes, leucine in a mixture of EAAs stimulates protein synthesis for 2-3 hours, where as exercise stimulates protein synthesis for up to 72 hours. The take home message is that you need amino acids with a high frequency.
The second take home message is that even though protein synthesis is elevated with exercise for 72 hours, these effects lower with time. In our publication on Contemporary issues in protein consumption we provided the following graph to demonstrate this
Figure 1.0. The response of protein synthesis to exercise. Adapted from
Wilson and Wilson (2006).
This is one of the reasons why HIT training may not be as effective as a higher frequency of training, which is able to maintain higher levels of protein synthesis throughout a 7 day period, then a once a week program, which has diminishing effects.
Have you tried PWO with out the fat, and just protein and aminos? Not talking about carbs.
i want to also update that T-911 feels like a prohormone.
i don't know if i'll get the same body comp changes that prohormones deliver, but right now it feels exactly like being in week three of a prohormone run.
How would you say you react to Prohormones in terms of performance? I get both muscle strength and muscle endurance boosts, but the muscle endurance is the most dominant and notable front runner in my own experience.
i'm typically the same. w/prohormones i get both strength and endurance boost but the endurance and recovery are most notable.
the feeling i'm having w/t-911 is most similar to a prohormone in the mood elevation, libido boost, oily skin, and workout endurance so far.
Wouldnt you think that ingesting the aminos periworkout would be more valuable so they can make it thru stomach walls and into bloodstream by the time workout is done?
BCAA's peri-workout and Leucine post-workout.
When I'm feeling extra lazy, I throw 2:1 ratio of BCAA/Leucine into a zip lock bucket and mix it up.
Don't judge me, after doing this for so many months, short cuts are a welcomed luxury.
Well, and again we go back to the question of "if the difference between doing that and not is less than 2% difference in gains, how much effort is it worth"![]()
jesus tits this is a tough workout!!!Day 5 - Ham Dominant
A1) Standing Calve Raise 3 12-15 3231
A2) Donkey Calve Raise 3 8-10 3131
B) Standing Calve Raise 2 21's (Top, full, Bottom)
C1) Leg Curl 3 10-12 32X0
C2) Romanian Deadlift 3 8-10 3130
E1) Extended Step Lunge 3 10-12 3230
E2) Sumo Deadlift 3 6-8 30X0
F) Gironda Leg Curl 2 21's (Top, Full, Bottom)
Day 5: i think im on day five anyway :think: not really sure.
workout wasn't as strong today.
i'm really liking this pre-exhaustion routine.
i have had to check my ego a little though as i have to really lighten the weight load on the big moves (bench, squat, dead) because i'm fried by the time i get to them at the end of my workouts.
today was ham dominant day.
jesus tits this is a tough workout!!!
i thought it was just going to be hard the first week i did it because i wasn't adapted to the routine yet. but today was my 3rd time doing this one and it hurt every bit as much as the first week i did it.
so today, i didn't feel that great in the gym to be honest.
outside the gym i still feel excellent.
still getting night wood. i might be harming my bed sword by taking a night pee.
i'm very surprised at how fast t-911 kicks in!!!
What are your thoughts on Sumo vs Traditional Dead lifts? I've never tried Sumo, biomechanically speaking, it should be a little easier then Traditional because the resistance force is closer to your body, however, I believe you don't get to utilize the hammies as much.
What are your thoughts on Sumo vs Traditional Dead lifts? I've never tried Sumo, biomechanically speaking, it should be a little easier then Traditional because the resistance force is closer to your body, however, I believe you don't get to utilize the hammies as much.
i agree with what royd said.
sumos do seem to work the hips more and lower back a little less than traditional deads.
so far i'm not able to pull more weight on sumos than i do on reglar deads though.
but i'm new at using sumos. i'm also doing them at the end of my workout when i'm already tired.
sumos and regular deads are practically the same really.
the difference seems to be very slight.
it might be nice for some variation for the atletes you train.
I see the sumo guys with their legs spread waaaaaay out, and that brings the bar almost directly beneath you and you "appear" even closer to the ground, which seems to diminish the ROM. Those are two lever (torque) system principles working in your favor, HOWEVER, before I make any further presumptions and possibly blowing a warm breeze out me arse, I should try it before making such presumptions. This is just based off of observation, so your experience out weighs my theories.
yeah, i've seen guys do the really wide stance as well.
i tried and it felt ackward on my joints so i'm not doing them that wide.
it could be that i'm just performing them wrong though as these are new for me and i haven't had an actual strength coach show me the proper form.
Fair enough.
But a serious question, do you perform your HIIT on a field or a catwalk?