MrKleen73
Legend
AWESOME articles Andres!! Big thanks for posting them. I was just about to respond to the study Chris posted and say "but hey those are diabetics" but then say yours..
I am still tryna get a grasp on everything, my understanding on how fat intake effects the insulin response was based upon the writings of some pretty well known people in the industry, I guess it was my fault for not questioning it an looking further into it, I just kind of took it as fact considering the people stating it in my readings.
The bold portion interest me the most here. I have been trying to wrap my head around the relation of blood sugar and the insulin response. I recently got me a blood glucose meter and was going to do some test with various nutrient partioners ( ALA, NA-R-ALA, Barberine, etc) and was wondering the relation of the two. So far my understanding is insulin is released when a certain level of blood sugar is present in the body in order to decrease the blood sugar level. I was going to test myself after meals and after ingestion of whatever supplement I am taking just to see their effect and try and have a better understanding. For example one test I want to do is compare NA-R-ALA and ALA and their ability to induce hypoglycemia prior to bed. I would like to see what my blood sugar level is at after I take whatever supplement and then again after I eat x amount of carbs. See if anyone of them make the blood sugar more stable.
If you have any input on any of this Chris or anyone I would love to hear..
Now as for Insulin, I honestly think it is overrated in the bodybuilding realm. I try and keep my blood sugar balanced throughout the day and avoid insulin spikes. Insulin spikes from carbs are NOT needed to shuttle nutrients. I think what people tend to get confused over is that the "anabolic hormone" isnt really insulin but Insulin-like growth factor-1. IGF-1 has a more prolonged effect in muscle protein synthesis and in order for IGF-1 to be released, there needs to be a little bit of growth hormone release as well to trigger it, which can happen during the next 20+ hours after a very intense workout. IGF-1 is the hormone you want released for growth and it requires a little spurt of growth hormone to happen and the growth hormone can be completely blocked by dietary carb immediately after the workout, even if consumed in only tiny amounts.
Disclaimer:![]()
Again I am no expert in ANY of this and in fact I am very new to really getting into how things work and LOVE just learning about it all and this convo has been great so far. My above statements are all based upon information I have read and I hope in no way I am coming off as a "know it all" or challenging any of you guys
One more interesting thing I have found out recently, do you know what blunts GH release even more than Carbs? Fats, Lipids i the bloodstream already in the form that can be used as energy. Interestingly enough once GH begins causing lypolosis it immdiately blunts itself by the very lipids that are released. I learned this fact by researching on a GH specific site ran by DatBTrue, look his name up he is basically the Peptide Guru and seems overly knowledgeable in all things GH. The only food source that does not blunt GH is protein. Crazy....
I will come back to this but for now I have to clock out and go home.