Post workout protein = necessary?
Francl27
Posts: 26,371 Member
I was told by the gym nurse (among other myths) that one of the reason I lost muscle last time is because I didn't always have a protein snack right after a workout. It just seems totally counter productive to force myself to eat or drink something when I'm not hungry, and I can't always schedule my workouts just before I get a snack or lunch.
Is it a myth? Or is it really necessary?
Is it a myth? Or is it really necessary?
0
Replies
-
From my reading.
I think the most important macro to get within 2 hrs post workout would be carbs.
Studies have shown the body takes up carbs better within 2 hrs of a workout......after 2 hrs, the uptake for carbs is the same.
Protein does not show any difference in uptake.
Now what you do have to worry about is if your protein is not adequate enough, then post workout (if doing weights) muscle breakdown can occur if you are not supplying food to your system to prevent this.
Maybe post workout, try some chocolate milk.
-tastes good
-good protein
-good carbs
-some fat.0 -
Whats a "Gym Nurse"?0
-
You need a protein shake after you finish your work out. Drink it right away when you finish your last work out. Your body is burning and eating your own muscles. You need a protein shake every time you work out. Go to nearest Sam's club and buy a bag of 10lbs protein powder for $35. Muscle tech brand.0
-
You need a protein shake after you finish your work out. Drink it right away when you finish your last work out. Your body is burning and eating your own muscles. You need a protein shake every time you work out. Go to nearest Sam's club and buy a bag of 10lbs protein powder for $35. Muscle tech brand.
I don't know about this......
Carbs would be the better choice IMO.0 -
Whats a "Gym Nurse"?
I was wondering the same thing0 -
I do agree that you need to get in some protein within at least 2 hours after your workout, the sooner the better, but yes there is truth to it I see a difference when I do vs. when I don't get any in for a while.
For the person saying carbs, I thought carbs were good about 30 mins. before a workout.0 -
The gym nurse is the nurse that works at the gym, lol. She's been giving me a lot of inaccurate advice (that I need to eat often to boost my metabolism or should try and build some muscles, when clearly I'm on a calorie deficit, for example), so I'm taking it all with a grain of salt...0
-
You need a protein shake after you finish your work out. Drink it right away when you finish your last work out. Your body is burning and eating your own muscles. You need a protein shake every time you work out. Go to nearest Sam's club and buy a bag of 10lbs protein powder for $35. Muscle tech brand.
Strong sales pitch. Wouldbuy/10.
OP the "Post Workout Window" is nothing to fret over. By all means take in protein post workout, but it doesn't need to be immediately after. As for the quote above.... just god awful information being regurgitated through the latest edition of Muscle & Fitness.0 -
You need a protein shake after you finish your work out. Drink it right away when you finish your last work out. Your body is burning and eating your own muscles. You need a protein shake every time you work out. Go to nearest Sam's club and buy a bag of 10lbs protein powder for $35. Muscle tech brand.
OP, it's mostly myth. You need to hit your protein goals for the day, you don't need to specifically get it in right after working out. Just make sure you are eating enough protein in total for the day.0 -
I'm still stuck on this Gym nurse concept.0
-
From my understanding, as long as you have enough protein in your diet, you do not need any protein supplements. Are you aware of how much you're eating? I try to get 1g per pound of lean body mass, so about 90-110g/ day. Eggs, yogurt, cheese, and meat products are all excellent ways to add it to your diet naturally.
That being said, having the largest meal of your day or getting a good amount of protein, within 2 hours of your workout aids in muscle recovery. I imagine this helps rebuild the muscles worked through lifting. If I can't eat around that time, I have a protein shake or bar. My favorite shake is Calnaturale Cappuccino Protein Drink (straight from the fridge, already made) with 16g protein. Favorite bar is PROBAR Core Mint Chocolate with 20g protein. Hope that was helpful!0 -
pshhhhh. no. the whole post-workout "meal window" thing has no meaningful scientific basis. Everything you eat averages out; just eat enough protein throughout the day. If you do eat a meal a few hours after your workout, it should be balanced and have enough protein...but that goes for any meal you eat. Weight loss will always have some muscle lost with the fat, but the only proven way to minimize that is to make sure you're not completely starving yourself at a crazy deficit. People say "use the muscles and you won't lose them"- seems like nonsense to me but I haven't found any scientific evidence either way. Of course, working out is good so I still do it, I'm not saying don't work out- I'm just saying there's very little scientific evidence that we can influence how our body chooses to lose weight. Just like you can't spot-reduce fat, you can't spot-preserve muscle.
Post-workout meal timing COULD matter for a competitive athlete trying to maximize their glyogen stores for maximum training or competition (aka carb loading). But normal people working out in a gym...no. I researched this a lot a few years ago. Get on PubMed and find the science!0 -
Ok thanks I just wanted to make sure! I try to eat at least 110g of protein a day (goal is 120).0
-
Ok thanks I just wanted to make sure! I try to eat at least 110g of protein a day (goal is 120).
Then you are fine.
If you are worried about losing muscle.
Take some BCAAs0 -
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost0
-
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost
Absolute barking nonsense OP.
I challenge anyone to provide evidence for this eating window.
Just eat within your macros for the day.0 -
Ok thanks I just wanted to make sure! I try to eat at least 110g of protein a day (goal is 120).
Then you are fine.
If you are worried about losing muscle.
Take some BCAAs
I wouldn't just take BCAA's....why if you can take whey protein and you get everything in the protein whey such as BCAA's, Glutamine, vitamins, etc.
You recommending carbs? why?...0 -
broscience!!!! Yes there is supposedly a window where you may absorb more after working out.. but that window isn't 10 minutes or whatever.. its like 2-4 hours.. and the gains you may experience are not mind blowing.. get your protein in during the day and you will be good to go.0
-
Ok thanks I just wanted to make sure! I try to eat at least 110g of protein a day (goal is 120).
Then you are fine.
If you are worried about losing muscle.
Take some BCAAs
I wouldn't just take BCAA's....why if you can take whey protein and you get everything in the protein whey such as BCAA's, Glutamine, vitamins, etc.
You recommending carbs? why?...
I recommended carbs (if anything was needed) because studies have shown that post workout (lifting weights), your body was more receptive to carbs to replenish used up glucose.....and the body was more efficient within a 2 hr window post workout.
Beyond 2 hrs, the uptake by the body was the same.
So if the person got carbs in 3 hrs or 8 hrs post workout, the uptake was the same.
Alan Aragon.0 -
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost
Absolute barking nonsense OP.
I challenge anyone to provide evidence for this eating window.
Just eat within your macros for the day.
0 -
I don't know anything about science- how the body works.
All I can tell you is that someone suggested to me to have some type of protein after a workout-
even a string cheese stick-
explaining that it helps with muscle fatigue.
it had nothing to do with getting in my daily protein- it apparently is needed shortly after the workout
to do whatever it does to the muscles.
I tried it and it made all the difference in the world to me.
My husband started the same regime- he fishes tournaments-
and discovered the same thing-
the protein shortly after the workout-
keeps him from being fatigued later.
I guess this is my advice:
If someone gives me advice, I'm not out anything trying it- unless it's illegal, immoral or unethical0 -
The female trainer assigned to be the nutrition "expert" at my gym happens to be a competitive body builder, and she seems to apply her own food plan to everyone. She nearly panicked a couple of years ago when I mentioned that I was trying out being vegan. Rather than actually know anything about nutrition and balanced diets, she pretty much says, "I eat 8 eggs for breakfast and you should too." So unfortunately, I don't go to my gym for nutrition advice.0
-
The gym nurse is the nurse that works at the gym, lol. She's been giving me a lot of inaccurate advice (that I need to eat often to boost my metabolism or should try and build some muscles, when clearly I'm on a calorie deficit, for example), so I'm taking it all with a grain of salt...
Just curious- why do you say that this other advice is a myth ?
for SOME people, eating more often DOES make a difference- there's many nutritionists who recommend eating 5-6 smaller meals throughout the day instead of 3. I'm not sure if it affects the metabolism, but it does affect the blood sugar levels- keeps them on an even keel.
And her advice to build muscle? doesn't building muscle burn fat?
Just not sure why you think this is dumb advice?
If this same advice came from another person working out next to you who is in great shape,
would it be taken into consideration?0 -
The gym nurse is the nurse that works at the gym, lol. She's been giving me a lot of inaccurate advice (that I need to eat often to boost my metabolism or should try and build some muscles, when clearly I'm on a calorie deficit, for example), so I'm taking it all with a grain of salt...
Just curious- why do you say that this other advice is a myth ?
for SOME people, eating more often DOES make a difference- there's many nutritionists who recommend eating 5-6 smaller meals throughout the day instead of 3. I'm not sure if it affects the metabolism, but it does affect the blood sugar levels- keeps them on an even keel.
And her advice to build muscle? doesn't building muscle burn fat?
Just not sure why you think this is dumb advice?
If this same advice came from another person working out next to you who is in great shape,
would it be taken into consideration?
Because meal frequency makes such a tiny difference it really doesn't matter, and you can't build muscle on a calorie deficit.0 -
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost
Absolute barking nonsense OP.
I challenge anyone to provide evidence for this eating window.
Just eat within your macros for the day.
LOL...I was actually going to use this same exact gif...beat me to it.0 -
The gym nurse is the nurse that works at the gym, lol. She's been giving me a lot of inaccurate advice (that I need to eat often to boost my metabolism or should try and build some muscles, when clearly I'm on a calorie deficit, for example), so I'm taking it all with a grain of salt...
Just curious- why do you say that this other advice is a myth ?
for SOME people, eating more often DOES make a difference- there's many nutritionists who recommend eating 5-6 smaller meals throughout the day instead of 3. I'm not sure if it affects the metabolism, but it does affect the blood sugar levels- keeps them on an even keel.
And her advice to build muscle? doesn't building muscle burn fat?
Just not sure why you think this is dumb advice?
If this same advice came from another person working out next to you who is in great shape,
would it be taken into consideration?
Why is it dumb advice.
This particular OP stated they are in a caloric deficit, thus meaning they can't build any substantial muscle. The body lacks the building blocks to build muscle when it's in a caloric deficit (unless extremely untrained or morbidly obese).
Eating 5-6 times doesn't "boost metabolism". It has been debunked hundreds of times over.0 -
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost
Absolute barking nonsense OP.
I challenge anyone to provide evidence for this eating window.
Just eat within your macros for the day.
Yeh, which is why I laughed at the post (see: lol) and addressed the original poster (OP).
Reading comprehension for the win.0 -
Missed 15 minute anabolic window, all gains lost
Absolute barking nonsense OP.
I challenge anyone to provide evidence for this eating window.
Just eat within your macros for the day.
Yeh, which is why I laughed at the post (see: lol) and addressed the original poster (OP).
Reading comprehension for the win.
Ya.....That's not reading comprehension. That is a horrible attempt at sarcasm.
Reading Comprehension for the fallback.....0 -
Because meal frequency makes such a tiny difference it really doesn't matter, and you can't build muscle on a calorie deficit.
OP: Just curious - are you trying to build muscle or lose weight?0 -
Because meal frequency makes such a tiny difference it really doesn't matter, and you can't build muscle on a calorie deficit.
OP: Just curious - are you trying to build muscle or lose weight?
At this point mostly trying to lose weight, just don't want to lose more muscle.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.2K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 421 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 23 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions