Anabolic Window Myth or Fact
lisakatz2
Posts: 537 Member
I've read that it's critical to get your nutrition (especially protein) in within an hour of working out. Myth or fact?
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Replies
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Maybe in the middle from what I've read. While your body will tend to absorb more within the 30min-2hr mark, its not necessarily critical to get it all there. There are many benefits to re-fueling your body within that window though, and definitely eat/drink something to help your body recover. But there are a lot of good articles on it, linked the NIH one that has a lot of study based data.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5852800/1 -
It's myth. So long as you're getting calories and protein in the hours around your workout, you're fine. The most important thing is get your daily protein in, at least 0.7g per pound if you're lifting, and the timing and spacing of that is far less important than just hitting your total.1
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Yeah, I mean, you're not actively trying to build as much muscle as you can, are you, lisa?
The research is mostly surrounding that. Go to Lyle McDonald's site for some reliable explanation, too.
For weight loss? Doesn't really matter when you intake the protein as long as you are getting it.0 -
More important to get protein in hours before going to the gym.
Overall protein consumption > protein timing0 -
Thanks for the responses guys. I try to get my protein soon after my workout but I can't always manage < hour (I prefer to eat whole foods after my workout, not shakes).1
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I'd also point out that very little is "critical" when it comes to nutrition. Our species has thrived for millennia--gained muscle, lost weight and survived any number of natural disasters, all without protein windows and perfect macro balance. Just do the best you can over the long term and it will all work out in the end.3
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Retroguy2000 wrote: »It's myth. So long as you're getting calories and protein in the hours around your workout, you're fine. The most important thing is get your daily protein in, at least 0.7g per pound if you're lifting, and the timing and spacing of that is far less important than just hitting your total.
RetroDude nailed it. If you want to optimize, get some protein in within 1-3 hrs of a workout.
Other than that, RetroDude gave you the facts.
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Nutrient timing isn't very important for most of us:
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If you are a professional athlete or bodybuilder looking to find that tiny edge to stand apart from the rest, the window can and does have a teensy tiny effect.
If you are an average human being just looking to increase fitness, just focus on getting adequate nutrition throughout the day. That's 99.99% of what you need. Let the pros worry about the final .01% involved in timing.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »Nutrient timing isn't very important for most of us:
I like this chart, but would underscore that it's about nutrient timing generally, not the anabolic window (protein timing) specifically or exclusively. Oversimplifying a little, some of those timing points on the right are more about carb timing than protein timing IMO.0 -
kshama2001 wrote: »Nutrient timing isn't very important for most of us:
I like this chart, but would underscore that it's about nutrient timing generally, not the anabolic window (protein timing) specifically or exclusively. Oversimplifying a little, some of those timing points on the right are more about carb timing than protein timing IMO.
Anecdotally when I was very involved in bodybuilding, whether I got some protein in after a workout or hours later at dinner it never seemed to matter.
As an aside, the older you get, say 60 plus, your MPS (muscle protein synthesis) decreases so in that respect overall protein awareness needs to increase.1 -
I've read that it's critical to get your nutrition (especially protein) in within an hour of working out. Myth or fact?
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