Post Weight Lifting Nutrition
Replies
-
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.0 -
It pops up every so often from concerned individuals that if you work out regularly or you don't consume enough calories, your body may burn muscle before fat during your fasting sleep. Given my eating enough and lack of exercise that intense, I don't lose any such sleep over losing muscle. I eat until dinner and go to bed on a light stomach.
Yet some work out at night, which begs for burning muscle before fat during sleep, so they end their day by stuffing themselves with slow-digesting protein and insist that meal timing doesn't matter. To stay within their calories they eat little or nothing during the day, which may put a damper on socializing at traditional meal gatherings.
This complete redesign of the daily rhythm may based on the notion of the body's metabolism and muscle building adapting better to a strenuous routine at night. So you reap a slight benefit at this one time and put in considerable efforts for the rest of the twenty four hours on the raised risk that a light wind might blow it all away.
Sorry, that was my little rant adding sleep to the discussion lol. Thanks for the article (real food!) and the various people's feedback. Here's another article, which talks about bigorexia, more properly termed muscle dysmorphia. I guess all the pieces somehow fit together.
Expert believes mental illness drives some bodybuilders
http://brainerddispatch.com/stories/011900/upn_0119000027.shtml0 -
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.
A simple weight lifting session is NOT going to even remotely "deplete" glycogen. Perhaps if you run a marathon every day, consuming 80 grams of fast digesting simple carbohydrates will be beneficial. For your average 45-90 minute weight lifting/cardio session, you aren't even burning an eight of your bodies glycogen stores.
For endurance athletes a post workout beverage, mainly comprised of iron, B vitamins and dextrose might be beneficial, saying that there is no fat or fiber in it (due to fat and fiber's regulation of blood glucose and insulin). For a weight lifting session that is finished off with 15 minutes of cardio, an immediate post workout meal is not necessary at all. This doesn't mean it is a bad thing to have, but idk about you guys, after Im squatting for an hour straight the last thing I feel like doing is having a shake.0 -
It pops up every so often from concerned individuals that if you work out regularly or you don't consume enough calories, your body may burn muscle before fat during your fasting sleep. Given my eating enough and lack of exercise that intense, I don't lose any such sleep over losing muscle. I eat until dinner and go to bed on a light stomach.
Yet some work out at night, which begs for burning muscle before fat during sleep, so they end their day by stuffing themselves with slow-digesting protein and insist that meal timing doesn't matter. To stay within their calories they eat little or nothing during the day, which may put a damper on socializing at traditional meal gatherings.
This complete redesign of the daily rhythm may based on the notion of the body's metabolism and muscle building adapting better to a strenuous routine at night. So you reap a slight benefit at this one time and put in considerable efforts for the rest of the twenty four hours on the raised risk that a light wind might blow it all away.
Sorry, that was my little rant adding sleep to the discussion lol. Thanks for the article (real food!) and the various people's feedback. Here's another article, which talks about bigorexia, more properly termed muscle dysmorphia. I guess all the pieces somehow fit together.
Expert believes mental illness drives some bodybuilders
http://brainerddispatch.com/stories/011900/upn_0119000027.shtml
i consider myself a bodybuilder, I am losing weight at 4100 calories a day, I could care less about slow digesting v fast digesting protein sources (if I had to chose between the 2 I would chose fast digesting protein every single time of the day, due to protein refractory period being a very very very slight issue). To generalize bodybuilders and say we are all have some form of body image distortion is about as logical as saying all Irish people are alcoholics0 -
Man I am staying out of success stories....someone is claiming unrealistic muscle game for their husband in 30 days.....thru Beachbody of course. Never going back there..too stressful0
-
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.
A simple weight lifting session is NOT going to even remotely "deplete" glycogen. Perhaps if you run a marathon every day, consuming 80 grams of fast digesting simple carbohydrates will be beneficial. For your average 45-90 minute weight lifting/cardio session, you aren't even burning an eight of your bodies glycogen stores.
Totally depends on rep ranges, sets and rest. Ultimate Diet 2 has 2 45-60min lifting sessions to fully deplete glycogen. For a typical strength program with lower reps, longer rest breaks (and probably less volume total) I'd agree that it is less important. Still that's the only time I bother about specific PWO macros.0 -
How would you know if your glycogen stores have been completely depleted??0
-
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.
A simple weight lifting session is NOT going to even remotely "deplete" glycogen. Perhaps if you run a marathon every day, consuming 80 grams of fast digesting simple carbohydrates will be beneficial. For your average 45-90 minute weight lifting/cardio session, you aren't even burning an eight of your bodies glycogen stores.
Totally depends on rep ranges, sets and rest. Ultimate Diet 2 has 2 45-60min lifting sessions to fully deplete glycogen. For a typical strength program with lower reps, longer rest breaks (and probably less volume total) I'd agree that it is less important. Still that's the only time I bother about specific PWO macros.
Can you plz post the data from Ultimate Diet 2. If you were consuming under 50 grams of carbs for 5 weeks, yeah then it'd be possible to deplete most glycogen. I have 0 idea why anyone would be eating under 50 grams of carbohydrates a day. I can tell you damn sure cutting at 516 grams of carbs a day is a pretty simple task, and I have not once felt my glycogen is remotely depleted, not even after a high rep high volume squat day followed by 10 minutes of HIIT cardio0 -
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.
A simple weight lifting session is NOT going to even remotely "deplete" glycogen. Perhaps if you run a marathon every day, consuming 80 grams of fast digesting simple carbohydrates will be beneficial. For your average 45-90 minute weight lifting/cardio session, you aren't even burning an eight of your bodies glycogen stores.
Totally depends on rep ranges, sets and rest. Ultimate Diet 2 has 2 45-60min lifting sessions to fully deplete glycogen. For a typical strength program with lower reps, longer rest breaks (and probably less volume total) I'd agree that it is less important. Still that's the only time I bother about specific PWO macros.
Can you plz post the data from Ultimate Diet 2. If you were consuming under 50 grams of carbs for 5 weeks, yeah then it'd be possible to deplete most glycogen. I have 0 idea why anyone would be eating under 50 grams of carbohydrates a day. I can tell you damn sure cutting at 516 grams of carbs a day is a pretty simple task, and I have not once felt my glycogen is remotely depleted, not even after a high rep high volume squat day followed by 10 minutes of HIIT cardio
I probably shouldn't for intellectual property reasons but it's higher rep ranges, low rest periods and yes it is a cyclical keto diet so under 50g of carbs is a requirement (for that period of time).
No you are never going to be fully depleted at that level of carbs. (and no it's not a necessity for cutting). Some just prefer cyclical diets.0 -
30-60 minute window postworkout is optimal for protein absorption and also for muscle glycogen replacement. if it is not done within that time period it can take up to 2-3 days to fully replace.
yeah nah.
PWO meal is very important if you are doing multiple glycogen depleting workouts in a short period or time ie. 1 day.
A simple weight lifting session is NOT going to even remotely "deplete" glycogen. Perhaps if you run a marathon every day, consuming 80 grams of fast digesting simple carbohydrates will be beneficial. For your average 45-90 minute weight lifting/cardio session, you aren't even burning an eight of your bodies glycogen stores.
Totally depends on rep ranges, sets and rest. Ultimate Diet 2 has 2 45-60min lifting sessions to fully deplete glycogen. For a typical strength program with lower reps, longer rest breaks (and probably less volume total) I'd agree that it is less important. Still that's the only time I bother about specific PWO macros.
Can you plz post the data from Ultimate Diet 2. If you were consuming under 50 grams of carbs for 5 weeks, yeah then it'd be possible to deplete most glycogen. I have 0 idea why anyone would be eating under 50 grams of carbohydrates a day. I can tell you damn sure cutting at 516 grams of carbs a day is a pretty simple task, and I have not once felt my glycogen is remotely depleted, not even after a high rep high volume squat day followed by 10 minutes of HIIT cardio
I probably shouldn't for intellectual property reasons but it's higher rep ranges, low rest periods and yes it is a cyclical keto diet so under 50g of carbs is a requirement (for that period of time).
No you are never going to be fully depleted at that level of carbs. (and no it's not a necessity for cutting). Some just prefer cyclical diets.
I have a very strong metabolism, hence why I can maintain weight at about 4500 calories a day. Eating under 50 carbs a day is stupid in my opinion, if you are doing that then perhaps a post workout beverage is a good idea, but again I have no idea why anyone would be doing a keto diet0 -
If you need the post workout meal 30-60 min after training to get your calories and macro nutrients then go ahead and take it. If you don't need to the cals and maros in skip it.0
-
"Your body can digest almost any amount of protein at once"
I have never seen any peer reviewed studies on this..
But I will bump to read your link later.
You are confusing absorption and utilisation.
When you see a study saying 60 grams of protein did not increase muscle protein synthesis more than 30 grams of protein this is not the same as saying only 30 grams was digested/absorbed.0 -
Here is an excerpt from the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrtion. Vol 7. The article is about many ergogenic aides (supplements), there effectiveness and supporting evidence.
Post-Exercise Carbohydrate and Protein
Ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise enhances carbohydrate storage and protein synthesis. Theoretically, ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise may lead to greater training adaptations. In support of this theory, Esmarck and coworkers [107] found that ingesting carbohydrate and protein immediately following exercise doubled training adaptations in comparison to waiting until 2-hours to ingest carbohydrate and protein. Additionally, Tarnopolsky and associates [430] reported that post-exercise ingestion of carbohydrate with protein promoted as much strength gains as ingesting creatine with carbohydrate during training. A recent study by Kreider and colleagues [431] found that protein and carbohydrate supplementation post workout was capable of positively supporting the post exercise anabolic response. In the last few years many studies have agreed with these findings in that post workout supplementation is vital to recovery and training adaptations [13,104,431-433]. These findings underscore the importance of post-exercise carbohydrate and protein ingestion to support muscle anabolism and strength. However, it is still unclear if there are direct implications of protein/carbohydrate supplementation on other markers of performance such as time to exhaustion, maximal oxygen uptake, and/or skill development.0 -
Here is an excerpt from the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrtion. Vol 7. The article is about many ergogenic aides (supplements), there effectiveness and supporting evidence.
Post-Exercise Carbohydrate and Protein
Ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise enhances carbohydrate storage and protein synthesis. Theoretically, ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise may lead to greater training adaptations. In support of this theory, Esmarck and coworkers [107] found that ingesting carbohydrate and protein immediately following exercise doubled training adaptations
Taken out of context this statement is absurd and I'm sure you can see why
in comparison to waiting until 2-hours to ingest carbohydrate and protein. Additionally, Tarnopolsky and associates [430] reported that post-exercise ingestion of carbohydrate with protein promoted as much strength gains as ingesting creatine with carbohydrate during training.
We already know that the when, hows and whys of creatine supplementation are mostly unimportant, all that matters is that you get it
A recent study by Kreider and colleagues [431] found that protein and carbohydrate supplementation post workout was capable of positively supporting the post exercise anabolic response.
Of course
In the last few years many studies have agreed with these findings in that post workout supplementation is vital to recovery and training adaptations [13,104,431-433].
That's just inane
These findings underscore the importance of post-exercise carbohydrate and protein ingestion to support muscle anabolism and strength. However, it is still unclear if there are direct implications of protein/carbohydrate supplementation on other markers of performance such as time to exhaustion, maximal oxygen uptake, and/or skill development.
This is a case of skimming the surface and missing the fish just below.
The point is not that peri-training nutrition has an effect, the point is that it is so small as to be unimportant for the average punter. An athlete will do whatever it takes for another 1%, whereas for real people with jobs, families, friends, hobbies, etc... It is simple supplement company marketing that makes them think it is at all worth thinking about to get your proteinz and simple carbs within 30 minutes of exercise.0 -
Here is an excerpt from the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrtion. Vol 7. The article is about many ergogenic aides (supplements), there effectiveness and supporting evidence.
Post-Exercise Carbohydrate and Protein
Ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise enhances carbohydrate storage and protein synthesis. Theoretically, ingesting carbohydrate and protein following exercise may lead to greater training adaptations. In support of this theory, Esmarck and coworkers [107] found that ingesting carbohydrate and protein immediately following exercise doubled training adaptations
Taken out of context this statement is absurd and I'm sure you can see why
in comparison to waiting until 2-hours to ingest carbohydrate and protein. Additionally, Tarnopolsky and associates [430] reported that post-exercise ingestion of carbohydrate with protein promoted as much strength gains as ingesting creatine with carbohydrate during training.
We already know that the when, hows and whys of creatine supplementation are mostly unimportant, all that matters is that you get it
A recent study by Kreider and colleagues [431] found that protein and carbohydrate supplementation post workout was capable of positively supporting the post exercise anabolic response.
Of course
In the last few years many studies have agreed with these findings in that post workout supplementation is vital to recovery and training adaptations [13,104,431-433].
That's just inane
These findings underscore the importance of post-exercise carbohydrate and protein ingestion to support muscle anabolism and strength. However, it is still unclear if there are direct implications of protein/carbohydrate supplementation on other markers of performance such as time to exhaustion, maximal oxygen uptake, and/or skill development.
This is a case of skimming the surface and missing the fish just below.
The point is not that peri-training nutrition has an effect, the point is that it is so small as to be unimportant for the average punter. An athlete will do whatever it takes for another 1%, whereas for real people with jobs, families, friends, hobbies, etc... It is simple supplement company marketing that makes them think it is at all worth thinking about to get your proteinz and simple carbs within 30 minutes of exercise.
This was my point... well said.
I will add, however, that a simple protein shake is quick and easy, even if it only does gain me 1%. I look at it much like I do a multi-vitamin. Do I need it? No, probably not... it certainly isn't the make or break factor in my success. However it is quick and easy, so for me it's silly not to have a shake post work-out.0 -
This was my point... well said.
I will add, however, that a simple protein shake is quick and easy, even if it only does gain me 1%. I look at it much like I do a multi-vitamin. Do I need it? No, probably not... it certainly isn't the make or break factor in my success. However it is quick and easy, so for me it's silly not to have a shake post work-out.
Preaching to the choir my friend We all have standards for what seems excessive and what doesn't. Today I spent 45 minutes foam rolling and stretching because that is a priority for me right now. Will we recommend these things to the "average" person though? We'll probably keep recommending the basics until they see results, then once they believe in their ability to change you can add the smaller stuff.0 -
You are going to get two answers here:
1. yes its great and you have to do it
2. no as long as you get your macros in throughout the day it doesn't matter when you eat it
I used to believe #1, now I'm a believer in #2. It just happens that I am usually hungry after my weight training and always have food ready but I don't wait to eat a meal so that I can consume it after a workout, it just happens that way.0 -
Then I apologize for trying to bring a documented credible source from a published and scholarly peer reviewed journal. I guess the people with degrees and years of experience do not know what they are talking about.0
-
I religiously drink a protein shake immediately after lifting.
I'm not sure I buy the nutrient timing stuff, it's just that I find if I do that then when I get home to make dinner I will take the time to cook some chicken or something instead of just stumbling into the pantry and immediately eating all the things0 -
This is a great read from The International Society of Sports Nutrition .
Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?
Alan Albert Aragon1 and Brad Jon Schoenfeld2*
http://www.jissn.com/content/10/1/50 -
This is a great read from The International Society of Sports Nutrition .
Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?
Alan Albert Aragon1 and Brad Jon Schoenfeld2*
http://www.jissn.com/content/10/1/5
^ This is an excellent one.0 -
I like this now. We have two credible sources to go off of and both have different and similar claims. Here's the link to the one I read through,
http://www.jissn.com/content/7/1/7
if what I understood was correct from the other one posted was that if you are doing multiple workouts in a day such as an AM weight training and a PM cardio then post workout meal/shake would be beneficial. In the circumstance of someone only doing weight training or only doing moderate cardio for an hour then it would not be as necessary.0 -
Thanks for all the thoughtful answers. I appreciate it.0
-
0
-
The principle of consuming right after a work out is sound advice. All those foods are generally good for you, if consumed in moderation, except for the cereal. That was random in the field of 10 foods.
If I go on a long bike ride like 2 hours, one of the first things I do when I get home is drink a sugar coke. Note, I do not drink or eat High Fructose Corn Syrup. I buy the mexican cokes that are still made with sugar. This sugar is quickly converted to glucose and shuttled to hungry starving muscles and will not add weight. About an hour later, I eat complex carbs, like a whole wheat sandwich with peanut butter or turkey. Good luck.
Hello, may I ask, how many grams of sugar is in that particular soda? (no hate, I'm just curious). I like to have a small amount of sugar after a workout also, it makes me feel a little better, but thats just me, everyone is different. Thanks!0 -
Then I apologize for trying to bring a documented credible source from a published and scholarly peer reviewed journal. I guess the people with degrees and years of experience do not know what they are talking about.
The main problem with research is people seem to think it's somehow magically 100% right and accurate. Peer review doesn't mean anything honestly, I'm working on a submission to a peer reviewed journal right now (and it's largely my opinion, reinforced by other sources). There's literally hundreds (if not thousands) of journals out there, and you can specifically market to ones with similar viewpoints.0 -
I like this now. We have two credible sources to go off of and both have different and similar claims. Here's the link to the one I read through,
http://www.jissn.com/content/7/1/7
if what I understood was correct from the other one posted was that if you are doing multiple workouts in a day such as an AM weight training and a PM cardio then post workout meal/shake would be beneficial. In the circumstance of someone only doing weight training or only doing moderate cardio for an hour then it would not be as necessary.
I haven't looked at the above study but regarding your second paragraph, generally carbohydrate timing will matter if you're performing multiple intra-day glycogen depleting events. In the manner which you've laid out the above scenario, it would make sense to ingest post workout carbs to replenish glycogen in between training bouts, assuming the AM bout was somewhat intense.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 176K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.6K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.4K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions