Getting muscular without adding calories

13

Replies

  • No_Finish_Line
    No_Finish_Line Posts: 3,661 Member
    In that study they selected athletes who were involved in: volleyball, cross country, rifle shooting, ice hockey, motocross, waterskiing, freestyle dancing, and ski jumping. While I fully recognize each of those as a sport I think that they all would experience gains in lean mass due to being new to strength training. I'm sure that they each have some muscle due to being athletic, but I also know that they would benefit from a strength program.

    except for the ice hockey and the motocross i see what your saying
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    The thing is, when you stress your muscles with heavy loads, you actually injure them by tearing them and then when rested, they heal back bigger than they were like if you break a bone and it grows more bone over to help protect. Isn't that correct? So if we are talking about the body healing itself and how it goes about doing that, one would think you could indeed build muscle at or around the same calories by constantly working that muscle - tear, heal, tear heal.
    Then why do competitors bulk if this is true? Why go through hard dieting to dial in for a competition, if adding muscle this way worked?

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Because professionals need to add incredible bulk and slabs of muscle. Obviously you need to eat far more to add weight and size to your frame. When they cut, they lose a lot of weight quickly and get to a body fat percentage that is not maintainable. Obviously you would lose muscle with such extreme dieting and in such a short period of time for an extended period of time. And let's not forget therebis fat on muscle, so when you lose fat, obviously you would look and be smaller. But I know for fact ii lost weight while adding muscle where there used to be flab. If you take an untrained overweight person with no muscle and train him hard with weights and lean him out at a slow rate, I still find it hard to believe he can't gain muscle. The premise most people are giving is that when someone loses weight you see muscle that was already there and that just seems ridiculous to me. It takes hard work to build muscle. Fat untrained people don't have all kinds of muscle just sitting there waiting to be seen

    I completely disagree with that. if you've been over weight your entire life you've built muscle in order to move around that extra weight. you see it all the time on the extream weight loss tv shows.

    there was a 19 yearold base ball phenom who certainly didn't workout a day in his life, he picked up the trainer and threw him around like a rag doll when they first met.

    You are talking about strength, not muscle mass. The strongest guy I ever saw in a fight was 170 lbs with skinny little arms. He could throw much larger guys around but couldn't bench 130 lbs. strength and muscular development are two different things. That's why bodybuilders and strong men look different.
  • ironanimal
    ironanimal Posts: 5,922 Member
    You can recomp, and it is more viable as a guy, but speaking from all I've read and from personal experience - it is very inefficient. Focusing on losing fat, THEN building muscle will be much more time efficient, and you will see progress more steadily and quickly which is never a bad thing.
  • No_Finish_Line
    No_Finish_Line Posts: 3,661 Member
    The thing is, when you stress your muscles with heavy loads, you actually injure them by tearing them and then when rested, they heal back bigger than they were like if you break a bone and it grows more bone over to help protect. Isn't that correct? So if we are talking about the body healing itself and how it goes about doing that, one would think you could indeed build muscle at or around the same calories by constantly working that muscle - tear, heal, tear heal.
    Then why do competitors bulk if this is true? Why go through hard dieting to dial in for a competition, if adding muscle this way worked?

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Because professionals need to add incredible bulk and slabs of muscle. Obviously you need to eat far more to add weight and size to your frame. When they cut, they lose a lot of weight quickly and get to a body fat percentage that is not maintainable. Obviously you would lose muscle with such extreme dieting and in such a short period of time for an extended period of time. And let's not forget therebis fat on muscle, so when you lose fat, obviously you would look and be smaller. But I know for fact ii lost weight while adding muscle where there used to be flab. If you take an untrained overweight person with no muscle and train him hard with weights and lean him out at a slow rate, I still find it hard to believe he can't gain muscle. The premise most people are giving is that when someone loses weight you see muscle that was already there and that just seems ridiculous to me. It takes hard work to build muscle. Fat untrained people don't have all kinds of muscle just sitting there waiting to be seen

    I completely disagree with that. if you've been over weight your entire life you've built muscle in order to move around that extra weight. you see it all the time on the extream weight loss tv shows.

    there was a 19 yearold base ball phenom who certainly didn't workout a day in his life, he picked up the trainer and threw him around like a rag doll when they first met.

    You are talking about strength, not muscle mass. The strongest guy I ever saw in a fight was 170 lbs with skinny little arms. He could throw much larger guys around but couldn't bench 130 lbs. strength and muscular development are two different things. That's why bodybuilders and strong men look different.

    true, true. But i think your other post was more to the point.

    you'll get very close to your full genetic potential in the first few years of lifting... maybe not because you progress so quickly but because you naturally develop close to your potential anyway, and the few years gets you that much closer to the max

    i think most, not all but most, men would be very happy with how muscular they are if they maintained close to thier current level of muscle mass and dropped the fat.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    The thing is, when you stress your muscles with heavy loads, you actually injure them by tearing them and then when rested, they heal back bigger than they were like if you break a bone and it grows more bone over to help protect. Isn't that correct? So if we are talking about the body healing itself and how it goes about doing that, one would think you could indeed build muscle at or around the same calories by constantly working that muscle - tear, heal, tear heal.
    Then why do competitors bulk if this is true? Why go through hard dieting to dial in for a competition, if adding muscle this way worked?

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Because professionals need to add incredible bulk and slabs of muscle. Obviously you need to eat far more to add weight and size to your frame. When they cut, they lose a lot of weight quickly and get to a body fat percentage that is not maintainable. Obviously you would lose muscle with such extreme dieting and in such a short period of time for an extended period of time. And let's not forget therebis fat on muscle, so when you lose fat, obviously you would look and be smaller. But I know for fact ii lost weight while adding muscle where there used to be flab. If you take an untrained overweight person with no muscle and train him hard with weights and lean him out at a slow rate, I still find it hard to believe he can't gain muscle. The premise most people are giving is that when someone loses weight you see muscle that was already there and that just seems ridiculous to me. It takes hard work to build muscle. Fat untrained people don't have all kinds of muscle just sitting there waiting to be seen

    I completely disagree with that. if you've been over weight your entire life you've built muscle in order to move around that extra weight. you see it all the time on the extream weight loss tv shows.

    there was a 19 yearold base ball phenom who certainly didn't workout a day in his life, he picked up the trainer and threw him around like a rag doll when they first met.

    You are talking about strength, not muscle mass. The strongest guy I ever saw in a fight was 170 lbs with skinny little arms. He could throw much larger guys around but couldn't bench 130 lbs. strength and muscular development are two different things. That's why bodybuilders and strong men look different.

    true, true. But i think your other post was more to the point.

    you'll get very close to your full genetic potential in the first few years of lifting... maybe not because you progress so quickly but because you naturally develop close to your potential anyway, and the few years gets you that much closer to the max

    i think most, not all but most, men would be very happy with how muscular they are if they maintained close to thier current level of muscle mass and dropped the fat.
    yes I can buy that. Most guys I see who lose a lot of weight look like Jarrod from Subway and not like Ryan Reynolds though. :)
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    Interesting article on the subject

    http://scoobysworkshop.com/gain-muscle-lose-fat/
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member

    Good articles - thanks for posting. I think a lot of people on MFP confuse "losing weight" with "losing fat". It's true that you can't gain weight on a caloric deficit -- that would violate the First Law of Thermodynamics (excluding the gain of water weight). However, you can lose fat and simultaneously gain muscle while on a caloric deficit -- but the mass of fat loss will exceed that of LBM gain...
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member

    Good articles - thanks for posting. I think a lot of people on MFP confuse "losing weight" with "losing fat". It's true that you can't gain weight on a caloric deficit -- that would violate the First Law of Thermodynamics (excluding the gain of water weight). However, you can lose fat and simultaneously gain muscle while on a caloric deficit -- but the mass of fat loss will exceed that of LBM gain...

    Thanks for that. I'm kinda speechless, because you are the first person to agree with me on here and not tell me why scientific studies are wrong lol. It's an interesting dynamic on here. People who can't lose more than 5 pounds want to adamantly argue about how to lose weight, and guys with 10 inch arms want to argue about how to gain muscle. I mean no disrespect to anyone but we are all on here to learn and develop, not to see who knows more and get attacked for posting personal opinions and experiences. Not sure how anyone could ever learn or develop if they disregard everyone's life experiences, scientific studies and expert opinions. My Mother Always told me God gave me two ears and only one mouth because I'm supposed to listen twice as much as I speak. :)
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member
    People who can't lose more than 5 pounds want to adamantly argue about how to lose weight, and guys with 10 inch arms want to argue about how to gain muscle.

    That's funny - I see the same thing all the time. There's a lot of "conventional wisdom" on these boards that is not supported by any scientific evidence, yet it gets repeated all the time, and there's a popular notion among some here that putting calories in your body is no different than putting marbles in a jar. It doesn't matter what kind, or how many, or when -- eat 1800 calories of meat, whole grains, and vegetables, or eat 1800 calories of cake frosting, it makes no difference. Anabolism, catabolism, insulin, cortisol... none of those things have anything to do with body composition.
  • Morgaath
    Morgaath Posts: 679 Member
    So I was involved in a recent discussion where everyone said you can't get muscular unless you add calories, so I thought I'd throw it out to the community to get your thoughts. Here are some questions.

    1. If I am overweight, untrained and really have no muscularity and I currently eat 4000 calories a day, if I cut my calories to 3000 a day and weight train hard, it is impossible for me to gain muscle?

    2 If I am a 180 pound man, and keep around my normal calories or even slightly under my calories and I train hard, it is impossible for me to gain any new muscle?

    I'm really curious about this topic and looking forward to the responses from those of you who are knowledgeable on this topic. When I pointed out that I had lost weight and built muscle, I was told the muscle I had just showed more as I lost weight. The thing is, I didn't really have any muscle. And if that's true, how did I go from a 36" waist to a 32" while adding more than an inch to my arms? How did my pants get loose, while my shirts got tighter in the chest and arms?

    Looking forward to your comments.

    I almost feel like you cut and pasted some of my comments on earlier threads.

    I lost 20ish lbs doing a bunch of cardio/high rep low weight stuff at 1350cals, and then started doing 5x5 and slowly eating more (1500, 1700, 1800, 2000, and now 2500) over the next 6 months. During that time I lost another 5 lbs over the first 2 months and then just settled in to 190. At 218 my arms were 12.25". Before i started lifting they were 11". Now they are at 12.5"...and folks keep telling me it is just definition from fat loss (Umm...huh?)...or water (That is a lot of water to be holding for 6 months)...or "newbie gains" (Gains of what they can't say because then it would have to be muscle, which they swear can't ever ever happen if I am not eating at a surplus).
    Meanwhile I am needing to buy new pants because the old ones don't stay up any more, and I don't want to look like one of those saggy bottom boys.
    And having spent the last month wearing tights at a Ren Faire, and had lots of women I don't know compliment my butt and legs...I think this working out with heavy weights thing is working for me.
  • chrisdavey
    chrisdavey Posts: 9,834 Member
    The thing is, when you stress your muscles with heavy loads, you actually injure them by tearing them and then when rested, they heal back bigger than they were like if you break a bone and it grows more bone over to help protect. Isn't that correct? So if we are talking about the body healing itself and how it goes about doing that, one would think you could indeed build muscle at or around the same calories by constantly working that muscle - tear, heal, tear heal.
    Then why do competitors bulk if this is true? Why go through hard dieting to dial in for a competition, if adding muscle this way worked?

    A.C.E. Certified Personal and Group Fitness Trainer
    IDEA Fitness member
    Kickboxing Certified Instructor
    Been in fitness industry for 30 years and have studied kinesiology and nutrition

    Because professionals need to add incredible bulk and slabs of muscle. Obviously you need to eat far more to add weight and size to your frame. When they cut, they lose a lot of weight quickly and get to a body fat percentage that is not maintainable. Obviously you would lose muscle with such extreme dieting and in such a short period of time for an extended period of time. And let's not forget therebis fat on muscle, so when you lose fat, obviously you would look and be smaller. But I know for fact ii lost weight while adding muscle where there used to be flab. If you take an untrained overweight person with no muscle and train him hard with weights and lean him out at a slow rate, I still find it hard to believe he can't gain muscle. The premise most people are giving is that when someone loses weight you see muscle that was already there and that just seems ridiculous to me. It takes hard work to build muscle. Fat untrained people don't have all kinds of muscle just sitting there waiting to be seen.

    Unsure where you are getting your info from but bodybuilders definitely DON'T try and lose weight quickly. It's a pretty well known fact that lean people with large deficits don't retain LBM very well hence slow cutting is the norm. Referring to natty's here but I'd assume the pro's would be similar. I know many natty bber's who will diet for up to 26 weeks for a show. (from what most would consider is fairly lean to begin with)

    Untrained overweight person is lugging around extra weight everyday. It's like me walking around with a weight vest on 24/7.

    The answer to your question is that you aren't a special snowflake. There are 3 conditions where LBM can be gained while in calorie deficit.
    A: noob
    B: muscle memory (you said you trained a long time ago and have now returned)
    C: drugs

    You can gain some LBM while in deficit for a while but I wouldn't expect it to be a large amount and it definitely won't last indefinitely. At some stage, if you want to gain further LBM you will need a cal surplus.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    So I was involved in a recent discussion where everyone said you can't get muscular unless you add calories, so I thought I'd throw it out to the community to get your thoughts. Here are some questions.

    1. If I am overweight, untrained and really have no muscularity and I currently eat 4000 calories a day, if I cut my calories to 3000 a day and weight train hard, it is impossible for me to gain muscle?

    2 If I am a 180 pound man, and keep around my normal calories or even slightly under my calories and I train hard, it is impossible for me to gain any new muscle?

    I'm really curious about this topic and looking forward to the responses from those of you who are knowledgeable on this topic. When I pointed out that I had lost weight and built muscle, I was told the muscle I had just showed more as I lost weight. The thing is, I didn't really have any muscle. And if that's true, how did I go from a 36" waist to a 32" while adding more than an inch to my arms? How did my pants get loose, while my shirts got tighter in the chest and arms?

    Looking forward to your comments.

    I almost feel like you cut and pasted some of my comments on earlier threads.

    I lost 20ish lbs doing a bunch of cardio/high rep low weight stuff at 1350cals, and then started doing 5x5 and slowly eating more (1500, 1700, 1800, 2000, and now 2500) over the next 6 months. During that time I lost another 5 lbs over the first 2 months and then just settled in to 190. At 218 my arms were 12.25". Before i started lifting they were 11". Now they are at 12.5"...and folks keep telling me it is just definition from fat loss (Umm...huh?)...or water (That is a lot of water to be holding for 6 months)...or "newbie gains" (Gains of what they can't say because then it would have to be muscle, which they swear can't ever ever happen if I am not eating at a surplus).
    Meanwhile I am needing to buy new pants because the old ones don't stay up any more, and I don't want to look like one of those saggy bottom boys.
    And having spent the last month wearing tights at a Ren Faire, and had lots of women I don't know compliment my butt and legs...I think this working out with heavy weights thing is working for me.

    Amen brother. Sounds like we are the same. As I said above, guys with 10 inch arms insulting me angrily and telling me I'm lying basically. I never said it was easy. I bust my butt at the gym as I'm sure you do. Drop sets, rest pause, pyramiding. You need to shock your muscles to grow. I did HIT for a while, got skinny and built some muscle, but I just found it was counterproductive so I went back to my old school bro science program and built some good muscle. The reason people believe you can't is because they do too much cardio, which I believe wastes muscle first. I went back to my low cardio keeping my heart rate at around 120-130 for 20 minutes as recommended by most body builders and I lost weight without losing my muscle.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member


    You can gain some LBM while in deficit for a while but I wouldn't expect it to be a large amount and it definitely won't last indefinitely. At some stage, if you want to gain further LBM you will need a cal surplus.

    I totally agree with this. Once you hit a certain point genetics determine how much further you can go. And to your point about where I get my info - I certainly don't know everything and don't profess that I do. I love to study the routines and philosophies of the best. Been doing so since the 1980's off and on. I also had the great opportunity to hang with Mr. universes and female fitness models and pick their brains. My cousin was also a bodybuilder and I would drive him crazy with questions lol. I like to keep an open mind and listen to what has worked or hasn't worked for people. You obviously have a lot of knowledge as you are in incredible shape! Congrats. But take my advice- keep at it! You don't want to be like me and have to start from scratch again 20 years later in your 40's! The body just doesn't hold up as well
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member
    Unsure where you are getting your info from but bodybuilders definitely DON'T try and lose weight quickly. It's a pretty well known fact that lean people with large deficits don't retain LBM very well hence slow cutting is the norm.

    This is supported by scientific research. I posted this earlier in the thread, by I'll repost it, since it speaks to the low-deficit / high-deficit issue:


    This study, published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 2011, studied two groups of subjects on hypocaloric diets: one on a slow-reduction (SR) diet and the other on a fast-reduction (FR) diet. Both groups performed heavy-lifting strength training during the study. They found that the slow-reduction group both gained lean body mass and performed better on strength and power tests.

    "The aim of this study was to compare the effects of 5–6%
    BW loss at slow rates (SR) and fast rates (FR) on changes in body com-
    position and strength- and power-related performance in
    elite athletes. We hypothesized that the faster weight loss
    would result in more detrimental effects on both LBM
    and performance. Surprisingly, LBM increased by 2.1% ±
    0.4% in SR, accompanied with improved performance in
    CMJ and all the 1RM parameters, whereas there was no
    significant change in LBM or improvements in strength-
    and power-related performance, except 1RM squat, in
    FR. Total LBM increased more in SR than in FR, with
    weekly gains in LBM of 0.3% ± 0.0% and 0.0% ± 0.1%
    (p = .02) for SR and FR, respectively. Consequently, the
    slower weight-loss intervention had more positive effects
    on LBM and performance than the faster weight-loss
    intervention
    ...
    athletes who want
    to gain LBM and increase strength- and power-related
    performance during a weight-loss period combined with
    strength training should aim for a weekly weight loss of
    0.7% of BW, whereas athletes who only want to keep
    LBM might increase their weekly weight-loss rate to
    1.0–1.4% of BW"


    http://bit.ly/1oll53w (link is a pdf)
  • MichelleLaree13
    MichelleLaree13 Posts: 865 Member
    Your body is meant to use your own fat for calories when you aren't eating enough. As long as you et enough protein you can build muscle while eating a calorie deficit
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    This is interesting from an interview with fitness competitor Kelly Booth


    How did your body change after this phase?
    My body fat dropped extremely fast. In 6 weeks, it dropped from 24% to 19.8%. I weighed 112. I did get bigger, according to my measurements. My waist went up to 25-1/2 inches during my strength-building phase, but when I was "cutting," it went down to 22 inches. My overall body proportions didn't change a lot. And I don't have boobs anymore. They went away…and I don't think they're coming back!

    I find it interesting how quickly she lost body fat and yet she gained size.
  • chrisdavey
    chrisdavey Posts: 9,834 Member
    Unsure where you are getting your info from but bodybuilders definitely DON'T try and lose weight quickly. It's a pretty well known fact that lean people with large deficits don't retain LBM very well hence slow cutting is the norm.

    This is supported by scientific research. I posted this earlier in the thread, by I'll repost it, since it speaks to the low-deficit / high-deficit issue:


    This study, published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 2011, studied two groups of subjects on hypocaloric diets: one on a slow-reduction (SR) diet and the other on a fast-reduction (FR) diet. Both groups performed heavy-lifting strength training during the study. They found that the slow-reduction group both gained lean body mass and performed better on strength and power tests.

    "The aim of this study was to compare the effects of 5–6%
    BW loss at slow rates (SR) and fast rates (FR) on changes in body com-
    position and strength- and power-related performance in
    elite athletes. We hypothesized that the faster weight loss
    would result in more detrimental effects on both LBM
    and performance. Surprisingly, LBM increased by 2.1% ±
    0.4% in SR, accompanied with improved performance in
    CMJ and all the 1RM parameters, whereas there was no
    significant change in LBM or improvements in strength-
    and power-related performance, except 1RM squat, in
    FR. Total LBM increased more in SR than in FR, with
    weekly gains in LBM of 0.3% ± 0.0% and 0.0% ± 0.1%
    (p = .02) for SR and FR, respectively. Consequently, the
    slower weight-loss intervention had more positive effects
    on LBM and performance than the faster weight-loss
    intervention
    ...
    athletes who want
    to gain LBM and increase strength- and power-related
    performance during a weight-loss period combined with
    strength training should aim for a weekly weight loss of
    0.7% of BW, whereas athletes who only want to keep
    LBM might increase their weekly weight-loss rate to
    1.0–1.4% of BW"


    http://bit.ly/1oll53w (link is a pdf)

    Interesting. However, I think the difference is the type of athlete and their expertise. In the study above, the people were athletes who compete in non strength sports for the most part and also did some resistance training. (3hrs/week on average it seems) Starting BF% at 16-17% for guys and 29% for girls. Not exactly lean IMO. The possibility of losing LBM while dieting is much higher for leaner individuals.

    Then there is this
    Evidence-based recommendations for natural bodybuilding contest preparation: nutrition and supplementation.

    Helms ER1, Aragon AA2, Fitschen PJ3.



    Author information





    Abstract

    The popularity of natural bodybuilding is increasing; however, evidence-based recommendations for it are lacking. This paper reviewed the scientific literature relevant to competition preparation on nutrition and supplementation, resulting in the following recommendations. Caloric intake should be set at a level that results in bodyweight losses of approximately 0.5 to 1%/wk to maximize muscle retention. Within this caloric intake, most but not all bodybuilders will respond best to consuming 2.3-3.1 g/kg of lean body mass per day of protein, 15-30% of calories from fat, and the reminder of calories from carbohydrate. Eating three to six meals per day with a meal containing 0.4-0.5 g/kg bodyweight of protein prior and subsequent to resistance training likely maximizes any theoretical benefits of nutrient timing and frequency. However, alterations in nutrient timing and frequency appear to have little effect on fat loss or lean mass retention. Among popular supplements, creatine monohydrate, caffeine and beta-alanine appear to have beneficial effects relevant to contest preparation, however others do not or warrant further study. The practice of dehydration and electrolyte manipulation in the final days and hours prior to competition can be dangerous, and may not improve appearance. Increasing carbohydrate intake at the end of preparation has a theoretical rationale to improve appearance, however it is understudied. Thus, if carbohydrate loading is pursued it should be practiced prior to competition and its benefit assessed individually. Finally, competitors should be aware of the increased risk of developing eating and body image disorders in aesthetic sport and therefore should have access to the appropriate mental health professionals.

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24864135

    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting. If it was easy to gain LBM while dieting (naturally) I think people would do that.

    So the difference is context really. Overweight noobs can gain "some" LBM while dieting, not indefinitely. Leaner individuals with training experience are not likely to have the same result during a dieting phase with adequate resistance training.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    Unsure where you are getting your info from but bodybuilders definitely DON'T try and lose weight quickly. It's a pretty well known fact that lean people with large deficits don't retain LBM very well hence slow cutting is the norm.

    This is supported by scientific research. I posted this earlier in the thread, by I'll repost it, since it speaks to the low-deficit / high-deficit issue:


    This study, published in the International Journal of Sport Nutrition and Exercise Metabolism, 2011, studied two groups of subjects on hypocaloric diets: one on a slow-reduction (SR) diet and the other on a fast-reduction (FR) diet. Both groups performed heavy-lifting strength training during the study. They found that the slow-reduction group both gained lean body mass and performed better on strength and power tests.

    "The aim of this study was to compare the effects of 5–6%
    BW loss at slow rates (SR) and fast rates (FR) on changes in body com-
    position and strength- and power-related performance in
    elite athletes. We hypothesized that the faster weight loss
    would result in more detrimental effects on both LBM
    and performance. Surprisingly, LBM increased by 2.1% ±
    0.4% in SR, accompanied with improved performance in
    CMJ and all the 1RM parameters, whereas there was no
    significant change in LBM or improvements in strength-
    and power-related performance, except 1RM squat, in
    FR. Total LBM increased more in SR than in FR, with
    weekly gains in LBM of 0.3% ± 0.0% and 0.0% ± 0.1%
    (p = .02) for SR and FR, respectively. Consequently, the
    slower weight-loss intervention had more positive effects
    on LBM and performance than the faster weight-loss
    intervention
    ...
    athletes who want
    to gain LBM and increase strength- and power-related
    performance during a weight-loss period combined with
    strength training should aim for a weekly weight loss of
    0.7% of BW, whereas athletes who only want to keep
    LBM might increase their weekly weight-loss rate to
    1.0–1.4% of BW"


    http://bit.ly/1oll53w (link is a pdf)

    Interesting. However, I think the difference is the type of athlete and their expertise. In the study above, the people were athletes who compete in non strength sports for the most part and also did some resistance training. (3hrs/week on average it seems) Starting BF% at 16-17% for guys and 29% for girls. Not exactly lean IMO. The possibility of losing LBM while dieting is much higher for leaner individuals.

    Then there is this
    Evidence-based recommendations for natural bodybuilding contest preparation: nutrition and supplementation.

    Helms ER1, Aragon AA2, Fitschen PJ3.



    Author information





    Abstract

    The popularity of natural bodybuilding is increasing; however, evidence-based recommendations for it are lacking. This paper reviewed the scientific literature relevant to competition preparation on nutrition and supplementation, resulting in the following recommendations. Caloric intake should be set at a level that results in bodyweight losses of approximately 0.5 to 1%/wk to maximize muscle retention. Within this caloric intake, most but not all bodybuilders will respond best to consuming 2.3-3.1 g/kg of lean body mass per day of protein, 15-30% of calories from fat, and the reminder of calories from carbohydrate. Eating three to six meals per day with a meal containing 0.4-0.5 g/kg bodyweight of protein prior and subsequent to resistance training likely maximizes any theoretical benefits of nutrient timing and frequency. However, alterations in nutrient timing and frequency appear to have little effect on fat loss or lean mass retention. Among popular supplements, creatine monohydrate, caffeine and beta-alanine appear to have beneficial effects relevant to contest preparation, however others do not or warrant further study. The practice of dehydration and electrolyte manipulation in the final days and hours prior to competition can be dangerous, and may not improve appearance. Increasing carbohydrate intake at the end of preparation has a theoretical rationale to improve appearance, however it is understudied. Thus, if carbohydrate loading is pursued it should be practiced prior to competition and its benefit assessed individually. Finally, competitors should be aware of the increased risk of developing eating and body image disorders in aesthetic sport and therefore should have access to the appropriate mental health professionals.

    http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24864135

    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting. If it was easy to gain LBM while dieting (naturally) I think people would do that.

    So the difference is context really. Overweight noobs can gain "some" LBM while dieting, not indefinitely. Leaner individuals with training experience

    are not likely to have the same result during a dieting phase with adequate resistance training.

    Just a side point. You keep saying that gains won't continue indefinitely. NO ONE can gain muscle indefinitely drugs or not. I'm sure it will be much harder for you to double your gains now that you are so well developed as it did the first 2 years of your training. Everyone will hit their peak where genetics, age etc will no longer allow further growth, so I think we can dismiss that as a negative factor.
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member
    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting.

    Not sure that's supported by evidence -- just because the study made "no mention" of gaining LBM doesn't mean it doesn't happen, and the study I cited does make mention of LBM gains in a caloric deficit, so I'm going to go with that unless presented with something definitive to the contrary.

    But to your point about bodybuilders, yeah, I would agree that people who have almost no body fat to lose would have to lose LBM. It stands to reason that if the body has no adequate reserve of fat to oxidize for energy, it is going to resort to gluconeogenesis. However, most of the people who are interested in this aren't in the 2-3% BF range to begin with - not on MFP.
  • usmcmp
    usmcmp Posts: 21,219 Member
    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting.

    Not sure that's supported by evidence -- just because the study made "no mention" of gaining LBM doesn't mean it doesn't happen, and the study I cited does make mention of LBM gains in a caloric deficit, so I'm going to go with that unless presented with something definitive to the contrary.

    But to your point about bodybuilders, yeah, I would agree that people who have almost no body fat to lose would have to lose LBM. It stands to reason that if the body has no adequate reserve of fat to oxidize for energy, it is going to resort to gluconeogenesis. However, most of the people who are interested in this aren't in the 2-3% BF range to begin with - not on MFP.

    The study you posted was conducted using athletes from football, volleyball, cross-country skiing, judo, waterskiing, motocross, cycling, track and field, rifle shooting, freestyle dancing and ice hockey to name a few. I'm sure most, if not all of them, would have benefitted from adding strength training 3x per week. I'm sure they each had some muscle as necessary for their sport, but I'm sure they would have experienced new lifter gains.
  • chrisdavey
    chrisdavey Posts: 9,834 Member
    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting.

    Not sure that's supported by evidence -- just because the study made "no mention" of gaining LBM doesn't mean it doesn't happen, and the study I cited does make mention of LBM gains in a caloric deficit, so I'm going to go with that unless presented with something definitive to the contrary.

    Are you implying that lean people trying to get leaner can gain LBM if they were to stick to the .7% BW loss stated in the study above?
    But to your point about bodybuilders, yeah, I would agree that people who have almost no body fat to lose would have to lose LBM. It stands to reason that if the body has no adequate reserve of fat to oxidize for energy, it is going to resort to gluconeogenesis. However, most of the people who are interested in this aren't in the 2-3% BF range to begin with - not on MFP.

    Really?

    I know a lot of bodybuilders who use this site. They are typically not on the forums.

    Once again, the answer seems to be context dependent.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    Notice they make no mention of gaining LBM during a dieting phase. As bodybuilders are the leanest sport, they are most likely to lose LBM while dieting.

    Not sure that's supported by evidence -- just because the study made "no mention" of gaining LBM doesn't mean it doesn't happen, and the study I cited does make mention of LBM gains in a caloric deficit, so I'm going to go with that unless presented with something definitive to the contrary.

    But to your point about bodybuilders, yeah, I would agree that people who have almost no body fat to lose would have to lose LBM. It stands to reason that if the body has no adequate reserve of fat to oxidize for energy, it is going to resort to gluconeogenesis. However, most of the people who are interested in this aren't in the 2-3% BF range to begin with - not on MFP.

    That has been my point all along. We were never talking about body builders adding slabs of muscle while cutting. We are talking about untrained overweight people or at least with significant body fat to lose.

    Consider that Arnold was basically the same size for most of a decade. Jay Cutler too. Stallone has been basically the same size for 30 years. And those guys are jacked up on anabolics. At some point, you will stop gaining mass. New research suggests this is due to myostatin, which supposedly works to keep humans from getting super muscular, so now they are marketing an egg yolk lining supplement they claim limits myostatin lol.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    I have a question. There is really no perfect way to determine lean body mass right? And one factor people don't discuss is the fat around and within the muscles. If I take a fat guy who has been working out and lean him down, his arms and chest will obviously look smaller since there is less fat in and around his muscles. No one ever addresses this. Does smaller size necessarily mean less muscle? I see fat guys all the time with huge arms but you can't see one bit of definition. Its not all muscle. It's half muscle and half fat.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    Additionally, by this reasoning, Stallone must have been more muscular in Rocky than he was in Rocky 3, since he was much smaller in Rocky 3 and despite the fact that he didn't train back when he made Rocky.
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member
    That has been my point all along. We were never talking about body builders adding slabs of muscle while cutting. We are talking about untrained overweight people or at least with significant body fat to lose.

    Exactly. You can always point to the corner case and say, "Well, it doesn't apply to the guy with 2% body fat." Of course it doesn't. Almost nothing that would apply to everyday people would apply to bodybuilders when it comes to body composition.
  • jjplato
    jjplato Posts: 155 Member
    I know a lot of bodybuilders who use this site. They are typically not on the forums.

    My point exactly. Bodybuilders generally aren't the ones looking for body composition advice on the MFP forums. So for the guy who has 15-20% BF and wants to know if he can lose BF while gaining LBM, the answer isn't necessarily, "No, you have to bulk then cut. It's impossible to gain LBM while in a caloric deficit."
  • Huh? You can't gain muscle while eating at a deficit? I have, unless there's some hard mass growing on my body.
  • LifterDave
    LifterDave Posts: 112 Member
    OP, This is a very interesting thread but after reading this in your profile:

    About Me:
    Investor and certified personal trainer with an admittedly old school diet and training philosophy

    I am pretty sure you know the answer to your question already, but I do appreciate the dialogue this has created. I have a question for you though. In your profile picture you appear pretty ripped and those traps are freakishly huge. Have you been the king of shrugs and pulling movements or are they enhanced by Synthol? I am not trying to pass judgment one way or the other, I was just curious. Those traps look huge compared to the rest of you. Maybe it is just the camera angle. I mean no offense with my question.
  • jmangini
    jmangini Posts: 166 Member
    OP, This is a very interesting thread but after reading this in your profile:

    About Me:
    Investor and certified personal trainer with an admittedly old school diet and training philosophy

    I am pretty sure you know the answer to your question already, but I do appreciate the dialogue this has created. I have a question for you though. In your profile picture you appear pretty ripped and those traps are freakishly huge. Have you been the king of shrugs and pulling movements or are they enhanced by Synthol? I am not trying to pass judgment one way or the other, I was just curious. Those traps look huge compared to the rest of you. Maybe it is just the camera angle. I mean no offense with my question.

    Honestly, it's the flexing i did in that pic. If you look at my other pics, you'll see I'm pretty symmetrical. That pic is fully flexed. Believe me, I don't look like that standing still. My traps are pretty developed and I do work them hard with shrugs. I mix it up sometimes barbell shrugs, sometimes dumbbells, sometimes roll the shoulders with lighter weight, sometimes heavy weight with less movement. Some times front shrugs and sometimes side shrugs. And every so often I add rope pull-ups. I do a lot of standing military presses, lateral raises and Jesus' which I think help too.

    And no I'm not injecting anything. All natural here other than a lot of amino acids and supplements.