Muscles and Protein: How Much Do You Need?

Posted on June 27, 2010 at 7:12 pm in


Many body builders and weight lifters are overly concerned about what they eat and what food supplements they take. If you want to grow larger and stronger muscles, you should concentrate on lifting weights, but you can help muscles grow larger by understanding how what you eat affects how you recover from hard exercise.

Just exercising will not make you strong and it will not help you to grow large muscles. If exercise made you strong, marathon runners would have the largest muscles. The only stimulus to make muscles larger and stronger is to stretch them while they contract. When you lift a heavy weight, your muscles start to stretch before they start to contract. This tears the muscle and causes soreness on the next day and beyond. If you rest and let the muscle heal, it will be stronger than before you stretched it lifting weights.

This training principle of stress-and-recover is so strong that you can enlarge a muscle by lifting weights even if you are fasting, losing weight and all your other muscles are getting smaller. In one study, obese, un-athletic women were instructed to restrict food and lift weights. They averaged a weight loss of more than 35 pounds in three months and gained a lot of muscle.

Training for sports is done by taking a hard workout and then having sore muscles on the next day. Then you take easy workouts or you take off until the muscle soreness disappears. You improve by taking hard workouts and your muscles grow and heal while you recover on your easy days. Of course, if you could recover faster from a hard workout, you could do more work and be a better athlete. Scientists have known for years that you recover faster by eating carbohydrates immediately after you finish your hard workout. Other studies show that eating extra protein on the day that you take hard workouts helps you recover even faster. Eating extra protein reduces muscle damage during hard exercise. Eating carbohydrates along with a protein building block called leucine helps you to recover even faster.

Chronic muscle fatigue in athletes is associated with low blood levels of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins. The sooner you eat protein after you finish your hard workout, the quicker you will recover. The benefits of eating protein soon after you lift weights does not apply just to elite athletes. A study from the University of Arkansas shows that eating meat helps older people grow large muscles when they also lift weights. Muscles are made primarily from protein building blocks called amino acids. Muscles heal from a hard workout when amino acids and other nutrients travel from your bloodstream into the muscles. Eating food, particularly protein, immediately after you finish your workout helps muscles heal faster. This study shows that men between the ages of 51 and 69 recover faster and grow larger muscles when they include meat than when they eat only dairy, fruits, vegetable, whole grains, beans, seeds and nuts.

Most foods contain protein. Your stomach acids and enzymes in the stomach and intestines break down proteins into their building blocks, amino acids, which pass from the intestine into the bloodstream. If your body needs to build protein, your liver combines amino acids to form body proteins. Your body has no way to store extra protein. If you don’t need all of the protein you have eaten, it is broken down into organic acids and ammonia, which can be used for energy or stored as fat.

By: Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

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Fitness

When should i eat my carbs, protein, ect?

Posted on June 27, 2010 at 8:14 am in
speicial_k asked:


So in the morning i do 30 minutes of medium to high intensity cardio before breakfast. In the after noon at 5:30 i either do arms and back, core and abs, or legs for 30 to 45 minutes. The rest of the day i am sitting in class and what not. I eat about five times a day in small frequent meals. What should i eat at each meal (like complex carbs, protein, etc.) to achieve muscle gain? and i take one protein shake a day, when should i consume that? thanks!

Fitness Nutrition

2 Foods That Burn Fat and Tone Muscle Lightning Fast

Posted on June 27, 2010 at 12:27 am in


If you want to successfully burn fat and tone muscle and if you want to do it fast, nothing is more important than a proper diet. In this article I would like to talk about 2 powerful foods you should add into your diet if you want to quickly burn fat and tone muscle.

For effective weight loss, to burn fat, and to tone muscle, you not only need to eat correctly, but also do the following:

1. Plenty of sleep (7-9 hours)

2. Plenty of water (1-2 gallons a day…yes that much!)

3. Cardio Exercise (Limit the amount you do so that you do not end up burning off muscle along with fat.)

4. Weight Training (No brainer!)

5. And of course, proper dieting (protein, fiber, healthy fats, complex carbs, vitamins & minerals)

There are two super foods that are excellent at adding lean muscle, burning off fat, and are overall good for your health. These two foods are avocado and oatmeal.

Oatmeal has a lot of wonderful benefits for those trying to quickly burn fat and tone muscle. Oatmeal contains a good source of fiber, complex carbohydrates, protein, and several vitamins and minerals…..and to top it all off, it taste delicious! Here is a super tip when making your oatmeal to make it a powerful muscle building and fat burning breakfast…mix in protein powder instead of sugar or other sweetener’s! So, make sure to have oatmeal for your breakfast (Never skip breakfast!) a few or more times a week for optimum results.

Avocado may have a taste that’ll take some getting used to, but boy is it a powerful health food. Avocado contains monounsaturated fat which will help in boosting your metabolism, potassium, and is rich in other vitamins and minerals all important to burn fat and tone muscle. This fruit is also great for other health benefits such as lowering cholesterol, regulating blood pressure, and more! Make sure when you buy avocado that they are fresh and not bruised. You can eat them as is (without the skin), add them to salads, sandwiches, and even healthy salsa.

By: Avy Barnes

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Building Muscle Fast

Food to Eat to Build Muscles

Posted on June 26, 2010 at 3:24 am in


When it comes to building muscles, you already know that training hard will help you grow. However, if you’re serious about training, you should also be serious about your nutrition. So, what I’m going to do is share with you some food to eat to build muscles.

I’m going to outline some foods that will help you grow. I’ll categorize them by protein and carbs, which both play vital roles when building muscles.

Protein

Lean Chicken ******. This is one of my favorites. Great protein source.

Turkey. Lean protein source. Low in fat. Great for anytime of the day.

Beef (lean burgers and steak). This is the “big daddy” of muscle building foods. Red meat has a great rep in the muscle building world. It helps increase testosterone and supplies a good amount of protein.

Tuna. Great protein source. Low in fat. And great for lunch.

Salmon. It has alot of protein and healthy fats in it. Should be eating 2-3 times a week when trying to build muscles quickly.

Cottage Cheese. This food is a slow digesting protein. Great for eating during the day or right before bed.

Eggs. Great at building muscles. So, make sure you add eggs to your meal plan. I usually eat 3 whole eggs and 3 egg whites in the morning for breakfast.

Carbohydrates

Pasta. Loaded with carbs. Great for helping build muscles. You can choose between regular pasta or whole wheat.

Brown Rice. Another food that’s loaded with carbs.

Whole wheat bread. Great with turkey, tuna, or chicken. It also has a good amount of carbs in it.

Oatmeal. Great in the morning with eggs. 2 packets (or 1 cup) provides about 40-50 grams of carbs.

Fruits (apples, bananas, oranges). Provides a good amount of carbs, as well as other health benefits.

Potatoes. Another great source of carbs. Add this with a steak and you’ve got yourself a great muscle building meal.

Bonus

Avocados. Great for increasing testosterone, which is extremely important when it comes to building muscles.

Almonds. Decent amount of protein. Great for a snack. And will also help with your testosterone.

These are some foods to eat to build muscles. Add these foods to your meal plan and you’ll definitely notice dramatic increase in your muscles.

By: Tony B. Smith

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Fat Bodybuilders

Is Muscle Milk safe for a 15 year old to drink?

Posted on June 26, 2010 at 12:35 am in
aaron asked:


Does it cause acne or increase my testosterone level?

Is it hard on organs such as my kidneys and pancreas?

I like to use it because it supplies alot of calories and carbs for high school swimming and protein whenever I work out (which isn’t that often during my swim season).
Is there a healthier alternative to Muscle Milk that supplies me with both protein and carbohydrates?

Muscle Weight Gain

good vegetarian foods that give muscle and energy?

Posted on June 25, 2010 at 8:45 am in
gaga asked:


Im a vegetarian with a bland diet, im looking for some foods that will give me both energy and make me look great and feel great.

What should my grocerie list be? I need a good source of protein and carbs!

Muscle Weight Gain

The Importance of Exercise While on a Low Carb Diet

Posted on June 24, 2010 at 6:21 am in


The Atkins Diet, which received widespread public interest in 1972, did not fail to encourage the introduction of regular exercise. The dieter who has agreed to abstain from carbohydrates must appreciate the extent to which new chemicals can build up in a system that looks to protein as an energy source. Those chemicals form in the body muscles.

Still, the formation of those chemicals should not be viewed as a reason to cut back on the use of muscles (or in other words, to cut back on exercise). In fact exercise can help to push unwanted chemicals out of the muscles. Prolonged exercise improves the circulation of blood in the muscles.

Exercise should be seen as an essential part of all low carb living. After all, even low carb food contains calories. Exercise gives the dieter an added way to burn off those calories. Moreover, the expected changes in the body biochemistry, changes that take place in a body on a high protein, low carb diet dictate the need for exercise.

Following exercise, the number of muscle capillaries increases by as much as 50%. At the same time, the existing muscle capillaries develop an even larger opening. Blood flows faster in those capillaries. The faster-flowing blood speeds removal from the exercised muscles of unwanted chemicals.

At other locations on these low carb pages you will find information about low carb recipes and low carb snacks. While those foods all contribute to the value of a low carb diet plan, the willingness to stick with those foods does not guarantee success with that same plan.

In order to feel secure about the results expected from adherence to a low carb diet, the dieter needs to take time to exercise his or her muscles. Research on weight loss has revealed that any effort aimed at a reduction of body fat should include sessions during which the dieter engages in muscle strengthening exercises.

A person on a low carb diet might take-in a good deal of fat. Of all the tissues in the body, muscle tissues are best equipped to use the calories that are found in fat. The more muscle that a dieter can develop, the greater the amount of fat that his or her muscles will manage to burn.

Those muscles do not need to be exercising at all times. A muscle burns some fat, even when it is at rest. Still, muscle building exercises can help a dieter to develop a set of fat burning “tools.”

One word of warning: Muscle weighs more than fat. At first the stronger muscles formed by someone on a low carb diet can cause a slight weight gain. Eventually though the dieter will loose weight. Moreover, the exercising dieter will facilitate removal from his or her muscles of any chemicals that form while the body uses protein as an energy source.

Dieting should make the dieter feel healthier. A dieter is more apt to enjoy that feeling if he or she takes time to exercise while adhering to any sort of low carb diet.

By: Darren Williger

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Muscle Increase

5 Tips to Triple Your Lean Muscle Gains Immediately

Posted on June 23, 2010 at 5:12 pm in


Are you training 5 days a week, eating limited carbs and still not building muscle as you desire?

If you think it takes spending hours upon hours in the gym, hammering the iron relentlessly, you can relax. I can show you 5 simple ways to triple your muscle gains immediately!

Drink more water – Water is the most critical nutrient for muscle growth. It is the number one essential element that’s so overly discarded when it comes to weight training and building muscle. If you are only 10% dehydrated, your strength levels will drop a whopping 50% when training. If you want to boost your training performance and muscle gains, tilt the bottle, the water bottle that is. Hydrate your muscles well so they have the ability to push 100% each training session.

Eat carbs – Most people are on the low-carb frenzy and trying to build muscle. That just won’t work. If you want to build muscle and boost strength you have to eat carbs. They are the primary source of energy for activity and for weight training. When you train heavy with maximum intensity you deplete your glycogen stores. This leads to a greater need of carbohydrates for fuel and glycogen replenishment.

Limit your training – While most people think more is better, the exact opposite is true when it comes to weight training and building muscle. When you weight train you tear down your muscle tissue. Rest is what allows your damaged muscle tissue to repair and rebuild. Without adequate rest, your muscles will not grow properly.

Employ compound exercises – A compound exercise is a multi-joint movement that allows all the muscles and joints of the specific area to execute the movement. When you do a compound exercise you are working all the muscles in that group simultaneously, improving your core and allowing you to lift more weight resulting in greater muscle growth.

Lift heavy weight – To build muscle you must continually increase the demands on the musculoskeletal system every training session. Your muscle will grow when they are forced to overload. The idea is to constantly overload your muscles through increased poundage or repetitions every workout to improve muscle strength and size. If you don’t give your muscles a reason to grow, they won’t.

Building muscle doesn’t have to be hard. Simply by employing these 5 easy steps you can triple your muscle gains in no time flat.

Copyright (c) 2008 Karen Sessions

By: Karen Sessions

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Bodybuilding

Bodybuilding Carbs – How to Determine Your Carbohydrate Intake to Build Muscle

Posted on June 23, 2010 at 4:46 pm in


Including smart bodybuilding carbs on in your diet is important if you want to build muscle and gain weight quickly. Some people tend to shun carbohydrates because they are afraid they are going to gain body fat too quickly. This is not the case, however. Always remember that it’s total calories that cause fat gain, not necessarily carbohydrates.

Having bodybuilding carbs in your diet will help speed the process due to the fact it increases insulin levels, which is a primary hormone devoted to helping you build muscle mass. Without this hormone present, it will be harder for the glucose to get into the muscle cells where new tissues are created.

Understanding how many carbohydrates you need to build weight is important however since this will help you build muscle maximally without seeing a corresponding body fat gain.

Here’s what you need to know.

Current Activity Level

The first factor that’s going to come into play when it comes to determining your bodybuilding carbohydrate intake is how active you are. If you’re just performing your weight lifting workouts and little to no cardio in addition to this, then you’re not going to need nearly as many carbohydrates.

You could likely get away with about one gram per pound of body weight each day in addition to 25-50 grams placed right around the workout period, assuming that you’re eating in a calorie surplus (the rest of the calories coming from fat or protein sources).

Current Body Fat Level

Next up you should look at what your current body fat level is. If you’re incredibly lean, you’re going to need more carbohydrates to get started and will benefit from eating them. When this is the case you should aim to eat 1.5 grams per pound a day plus 50-100 more around training.

Speed Of Muscle Gain Desired

Finally, the third thing you need to assess is how quickly you want that muscle to be built. The fewer calories you take in the slower muscle building is going to go, but also the lower risk you have of adding additional body fat as well.

When individuals start really overloading on calories that’s when you start seeing a high fat gain, which can cause issues in many people.

Ideally you want to be somewhere between 200-500 calories over your maintenance value. This will encourage a healthy amount of weight gain without causing you to add body fat as well.

So keep this information in mind. Figuring out a proper bodybuilding diet will be critical to getting results because if you aren’t supplying proper nutrition to your working muscles, it’s very unlikely that you’ll see good results.

By: Shannon Clark

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Muscle Building

Do we need whole grains to build muscle?

Posted on June 23, 2010 at 2:07 pm in
Paula asked:


I have recently cut grains out of my diet and I feel much more lighter and more energy. I get all my carbs from fruits and veggies. So I eat fruit, veggies, meat, eggs, nuts and seeds everyday. Is this okay? I estimate around 1800 calories. I am a female and do cardio and weight training. But do I need grains to build muscle? I feel better when I do not eat many of them

Muscle Building Diet

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