PreWorkout and Fasting
mithileshkuncham
Posts: 6 Member
I am following 20/4 Intermittent Fast to loose weight. It has been great. However, lately my work is draining my strength out.
So, I am planning to take some pre workout to get some boost in the morning for my strength training. I am choosing PreJym as my choice. Does it raise insulin and break my fast ?
Here's the complete ingredient list of this supplement :
So, I am planning to take some pre workout to get some boost in the morning for my strength training. I am choosing PreJym as my choice. Does it raise insulin and break my fast ?
Here's the complete ingredient list of this supplement :
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Replies
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It has 4g of carbohydrates. If you want to be pedantic, you are breaking your fast. However I doubt that 16calories will create an insulin response.
Why don't you just have a black coffee and not waste all the other ingredients that are designed to "fuel" your workout?4 -
trigden1991 wrote: »It has 4g of carbohydrates. If you want to be pedantic, you are breaking your fast. However I doubt that 16calories will create an insulin response.
Why don't you just have a black coffee and not waste all the other ingredients that are designed to "fuel" your workout?
I'd go with black coffee too if you're married to the fast. But if you're trying to lose weight, you aren't going to gain any muscle, this means the 'weight on the bar' doesn't need to go up. You just have to keep lifting and do your best to keep the bar from getting lighter.
Make sure your getting high protein, continue lifting and forget how well you feel during your lift.
Or switch your fast around so your workout is closer to your eating window, or move your workout to your eating window area.
Besides, you want your insulin to go up when you're looking to gain muscle, try another method than this pre-workout low-sugar drink.3 -
trigden1991 wrote: »It has 4g of carbohydrates. If you want to be pedantic, you are breaking your fast. However I doubt that 16calories will create an insulin response.
Why don't you just have a black coffee and not waste all the other ingredients that are designed to "fuel" your workout?
Black Coffee is the normally what I consume in the morning. I was hoping, a little more kick than my usual coffee, especially for my Deadlift days.
Anyways, thanks.0 -
I highly doubt this would break your fast.0
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Ironandwine69 wrote: »I highly doubt this would break your fast.
Could you please, explain why ...0 -
mithileshkuncham wrote: »Ironandwine69 wrote: »I highly doubt this would break your fast.
Could you please, explain why ...
It will not interfere with your 20/4.
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It will break your fast, but are you married to your fast?0
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The first ingredient on the "Other Ingredients" list is dextrose, a fast acting, high glycemic sugar...so you tell me
On a side note..I also try to steer clear of anything that has any FD&C (Color) #XX..not good for your health/body1 -
kommodevaran wrote: »It will break your fast, but are you married to your fast?
Yes I do. Its something that's suitable to work life.
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DresdenSinn wrote: »The first ingredient on the "Other Ingredients" list is dextrose, a fast acting, high glycemic sugar...so you tell me
On a side note..I also try to steer clear of anything that has any FD&C (Color) #XX..not good for your health/body
I see your point.
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All this talk about breaking the fast... It has calories, it technically "breaks the fast". Black coffee has trace calories, in the most technical of a sense, it too "breaks the fast". The key question is why are you fasting? If the answer is because it helps you stay full, fits your lifestyle, helps with compliance, etc, then it really doesn't matter if you "break" it. Consuming 99.9% of your calories in a feeding window versus consuming 98%, 95% or even 90% of your calories in the same feeding window won't make a difference as far as satiation, compliance, or convenience. Fasting isn't magic, it doesn't cause extra fat loss beyond the calorie deficit you create so "breaking" the fast is mostly irrelevant. As to whether the preworkout will cause an insulin spike, I'd say it might. In addition to the minimal amount of sugar it contains, it also contains amino acids which have calories that aren't reflected on the label due to the way the FDA lets companies list them. Do these calories and this potential insulin spike (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21512300) make a difference? Not really a significant one, no.
TLDR: It certainly breaks the fast, it might cause an insulin spike and neither of those things make a difference in your overall results.0 -
The question of the fast has been beaten to death.
If you're going to supplement... supplement smart and effectively.
See Labdoor, examine.com,etc
Bottom line... the creatine and Beta alanine are underdosed. The Citrulline and BCAAs are relatively good... could be better.0
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