Why does this read like a vpx ad
mTor is maxed out for up to five hours from eating a good meal including a nice amount of protein. By constantly getting more protein in you just numb your response.
Will sipping on BCAA's all day have the same effect as constantly eating protein?
Constantly sipping BCAA:s seems to only be effective only when the quality/quantity of daily protein is severly restricted. For example a child in a third world country with half of his 12 brothers dead due to starvation would benefit from sipping BCAA:s constantly, but if your protein intake is on the level of a bodybuilder, there's no real use for this.
I do it because it makes my water taste good lol.. I love Xtend (BCAAs) / RPG (BCAA/EAA blend). And it definitely helps me drink far more water throughout the day.
Even fasting for 36 hours straight does not cause your body to break down muscle tissue, unless you're very lean (under ~10% bodyfat, and even then you'll get it all back with normalized calorie amounts in a couple of weeks)
This is incorrect. The body is always breaking down muscle in an anabolic:catabolic ratio. If anabolism is higher than catabolism, you build muscle. If catabolism is higher than anabolism, you lose muscle. It's as simple as that. I used to lose muscle when taking a week off from working out from not eating enough. I certainly didn't "fast"(besides the 8 hour fast called sleeping), so how did I lose the muscle if your claim is true? Now I stay in a calorie surplus when taking a break from working out just to maintain what muscle I've gained. You can't "stop" catabolism. You can lower it(sipping bcaa's may do this), or increase anabolism to make the ratio more favorable to building muscle. If you could stop muscle breakdown, damaged tissue would never get removed...
Hrm I tend to come back stronger when I take a week off to deload. I log all my workouts and I've noticed that in my numbers. I'm not sure if athletes would downgrade so easily. Maybe cardiovascular wise, I could see that. Just speaking from practical experience.
That is most surely correct. I also highly doubt most people would actually experience real muscle loss with one week off training, but if someone insists that they did, the only practical reason is that their bodies respond quickly to "non-stimulus" and downgrade their peak levels. With skill-based training the drop tends to be more aggressive. I do gymnastics as my main sport, and things such as handstand endurance drop pretty quick without constant, daily "reminders" for the body to keep the skill up.
These things tend to be highly individual. On olympic level there are athletes who thrive on up to three workout sessions per day. There are some olympic athletes who get destroyed by two workout sessions per day. Still both compete at the same level.
That used to happen to me for the first few years of working out. Now I'm either the same strength or less after a break. I don't do deloads, I just take a week off, and sometimes more if on vacation. I don't know many other 165lbs guys that can bench 330lbs; that is, after I can get it back up there after a break. What sucks the most is losing a couple of years of progress in a couple of months from getting sick.Hrm I tend to come back stronger when I take a week off to deload. I log all my workouts and I've noticed that in my numbers.
There are several different types of muscle cells. The cells are not part of the contractile tissue. Muscle tissue is absolutely broken down. Just making sure you realize your statement about muscle tissue not being broken down is incorrect.You are correct in terms that metabolism is not an on/off switch - There are anabolic and catabolic processes going an all the time in our body. Muscle growth is not possible without simultaneous muscle breakdown.......Muscle cells also do not get destroyed when one experiences muscle loss (only in cases of near death starvation does body completely rid muscle cells). The muscle cells simply shrink and become inactive, and their potential can be easily restored with exercise and proper nutrition.
I personally have lost a lot of muscle, and it took me just as long to gain it back as it did the first time around. I've always been a hardgainer though, so it may be a special case.Also, from a practical viewpoint muscle loss is something most people should not even think about. If you took a crash diet for two weeks without exercising at all, which would result in pretty "massive" muscle loss, you would gain it all back in terms of weeks due to muscle memory.
It depends on the rate of amino acid appearance and clearing. In Lyle McDonal's study BCAA's 2 hours after a meal spiked MPS since it's high rate of appearance raised amino acid levels higher than the previous meal, but cleared the system fast enough that the next meal 2 hours later still increased MPS. The four hour blanket statement only applies to whole foods(I'm pretty sure it was four, not five, but I can't find the study now).mTor is maxed out for up to five hours from eating a good meal including a nice amount of protein. By constantly getting more protein in you just numb your response.
That used to happen to me for the first few years of working out. Now I'm either the same strength or less after a break. I don't do deloads, I just take a week off, and sometimes more if on vacation. I don't know many other 165lbs guys that can bench 330lbs; that is, after I can get it back up there after a break. What sucks the most is losing a couple of years of progress in a couple of months from getting sick.
That used to happen to me for the first few years of working out. Now I'm either the same strength or less after a break. I don't do deloads, I just take a week off, and sometimes more if on vacation. I don't know many other 165lbs guys that can bench 330lbs; that is, after I can get it back up there after a break. What sucks the most is losing a couple of years of progress in a couple of months from getting sick.
You being a hardgainer and pressing double your bodyweight can perhaps explain the muscle loss. Maybe you're just on a such level that your body will immediately start getting rid of strength and mass if stimulus is removed even for a short period of time. Still, I doubt nutrient timing has a lot to do with it, i.e. you would experience the same thing even if you had a constant stream of aminos running through your system.
And yeah, on an elite level, couple of months off will definitely set you back off years. For a guy like me.. would probably make it back in terms of months.
There are several different types of muscle cells. The cells are not part of the contractile tissue. Muscle tissue is absolutely broken down. Just making sure you realize your statement about muscle tissue not being broken down is incorrect.I personally have lost a lot of muscle, and it took me just as long to gain it back as it did the first time around. I've always been a hardgainer though, so it may be a special case.It depends on the rate of amino acid appearance and clearing. In Lyle McDonal's study BCAA's 2 hours after a meal spiked MPS since it's high rate of appearance raised amino acid levels higher than the previous meal, but cleared the system fast enough that the next meal 2 hours later still increased MPS. The four hour blanket statement only applies to whole foods(I'm pretty sure it was four, not five, but I can't find the study now).
I've read a little bit about anabolic resistance. It's supposedly similar to insulin resistance. There's not much out there on the subject. I don't even know of a study on it, only anecdotal articles. Do you have a link to the quoted study?Pilon quoted a study in his EsE audio files (great collection of IF studies and general lines) that really keeping mTor up all the time can be counterproductive
I've read a little bit about anabolic resistance. It's supposedly similar to insulin resistance. There's not much out there on the subject. I don't even know of a study on it, only anecdotal articles. Do you have a link to the quoted study?
L-carnitine L-tartrate is a great supplement to up regulate the AR
I don't think androgen receptor dormancy is the same thing as general anabolic resistance. AR dormancy is usually from exogenous hormone use. Anabolic resistance supposedly happens from getting too much protein and being in a calorie surplus for too long. I don't know if I buy it, or to what degree it happens; there's not much info. Permabulks work for some people...