6
108 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com he science of sports nutrition is an evolving discipline, with new information frequently superseding previously accepted scientific fact. While nutrition topics are discussed at medical conferences around the world, until a few years ago sports nutrition wasn’t a major agenda item. To correct that notable gap, a group of scientists and teachers, all of whom shared an intense interest in the exchange and presentation of the most up-to-date research concerning sports nutrition, formed the International Society of Sports Nutrition. STARDUST Scientists Convene and Converse at the ISSN Conference at the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas by Jerry Brainum • Photography by Michael Neveux S N Muscle Memories www.ironmanmagazine.com \ NOVEMBER 2006 109

STARDUSTep.yimg.com/ty/cdn/homegym/IM6511-Stardust-Alanine-F.pdfhad better-balanced diets than nonvegetarians—likely due to a greater variety of food. •A study of L-carnitine intake

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    1

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

108 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

he science of sports nutrition is an evolving discipline, with new

information frequently superseding previously accepted scientific fact. While nutrition topics are discussed at medical conferences around the world, until a few years ago sports nutrition wasn’t

a major agenda item. To correct that notable gap, a group of scientists and teachers, all of whom shared an intense interest in the exchange and presentation of the most up-to-date research concerning sports nutrition, formed the International Society of Sports Nutrition.

STARDUST

Scientists Convene and Converse at the ISSN

Conference at the Stardust Hotel in Las Vegas

by Jerry Brainum • Photography by Michael Neveux

S N

MuscleMemories

www.ironmanmagazine.com \ NOVEMBER 2006 109

110 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

and sports-nutrition researcher. Some highlights of his rapid-fire presentation:

•Explosive exercise decreases growth hormone release, while heavy, slower exercise increases it.

•Heavy exercise raises testosterone levels, while light exercise lowers them.

•Exercise increases the density of androgen cell receptors that interact with testosterone, thereby providing an anabolic effect in muscle. Consuming a postworkout protein-and-carbohydrate drink also increases the percentage of androgen receptors.

•Kraemer confirmed that to acquire larger muscles, you need to control the release of

Mod

el: M

arv

in M

on

toya

corticosteroids, such as cortisol, during and after training.

Paul Cribb, Ph.D., holds a doctorate in exercise biochemistry from Victoria University in Mel-bourne, Australia. Cribb, who looks like a taller and leaner version of pro bodybuilder Lee Priest—and sounds a bit like him too—lectured on the effects of protein and carbohydrate on anabolic responses to resistance training. Cribb described three study trials that involved nutritional interventions designed to increase the anabolic effects of structured training over a period of 10 to 11 weeks. The subjects were men aged 18 to 36, divided into groups that got whey-protein supplements, creatine monohydrate and carbo-hydrate supplements either alone or in combination.

The first trial showed that al-though two groups were on a high-protein diet, supplementing it

Mu

scle

Mem

ori

es

The ISSN has held three national meetings, the most recent at the soon-to-be-razed Stardust hotel in Las Vegas, June 15–17. I attended the conference with IRON MAN publisher John Balik and his son Justin. Our goal was to obtain information relevant to IM readers.

The conference consisted of a series of brief lectures that lasted an average of 30 to 45 minutes. Un-fortunately, that was too little time to cover the information presented by a few of the lecturers. While there were PowerPoint slide presentations aplenty, time constraints meant that slides appeared on the large viewing screen for only a few seconds, chal-lenging even the most expert of shorthand writers. Some lectures were scheduled in direct opposition to others of equal interest, forcing hard choices on attendees.

I also felt that the showmanship of some of the presentations might have been improved, as we were all on technical data over-load. One researcher, Paul Cribb, livened things up with a slide of his scenic oceanview backyard in Australia. His injection of humor in the proceedings was a much-appreciated wake-up call for con-ferees whose attention may have wandered because of the sheer volume of information Cribb was cramming into his limited time slot.

Those criticisms aside, however, much of the data presented at the conference proved useful and practical. What follows is a summary of the info that I obtained, though my notes are admittedly limited.

William J. Kraemer, Ph.D., gave two lectures, the first called “Muscle Growth and Recovery,” which I felt sure would be of value. A professor at the University of Connecticut, Kraemer is an esteemed exercise-physiology

110 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

Kraemer confirmed

that to acquire larger

muscles, you need to

control the release of

corticosteroids, such

as cortisol.

112 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

got double the muscle mass gains when they took it just before and just after training.

Robert Wildman, Ph.D.,whose books have been reviewed in IRON MAN, gave an interesting but time-limited lecture: “Thermogenic Supplements in Fat Metabolism.” Wildman noted that fat-loss supple-ments can be broadly divided into three general categories:

1) Thermogenic—represented by caffeine, green tea, bitter orange and capsaicin supplements

2) Lipolytic—conjugated linoleic acid, caffeine, calcium, guarana

3) Oxidative—L-carnitine

Wildman explained that people who tend to be lean show more diet-induced thermogenesis. They burn more calories after a meal than people in whom calories tend to get shunted into fat stores, especially if they take in more calories than they burn as energy.

Green tea’s fat-loss effects extend beyond its caffeine con-tent. It inhibits COMT, an enzyme in the body that degrades catecholamine hormones, such as epinephrine, which is involved in fat oxidation. Green tea also appears to blunt fat-cell differentiation, which leads to the formation of additional fat cells, as well as lipase enzymes needed to digest fat, and studies done with rats show that green tea prevents bodyfat gains even in rats on high-fat diets. Green tea use also blunts weight regain after a diet.

Jeff Stout, Ph.D., in a lecture titled “Protein Intake and Muscle Hypertrophy,” confirmed the importance of getting protein and carbs into the body after training. He noted that adding whey to a carb drink provides 55 percent greater gains in lean mass than carbs alone. The potency of concentrated protein supplements is reflected in the finding that they increase lean mass even in untrained persons. Stout also suggested taking a protein-and-carb drink 30 to 40 minutes prior to training and sipping a carb drink during a workout. That leads to lower cortisol levels during training, which would favor heightened anabolic responses from the workout.

Dr. Kraemer returned to lecture on L-carnitine and exercise. He explained that taking L-carnitine prior to training leads to such benefits as increased fatty acid oxidation, decreased muscle glycogen depletion and less accumulation in muscle of the lactate associated with fatigue. Carnitine increases the den sity of androgen cell re ceptors, which leads to greater testosterone uptake into muscle. (continued on page 116)

Mod

el: B

err

y K

ab

ov

A whey-and-creatine compound taken immediately before and after exercise increases muscle gains.

with whey protein and/or creatine led to greater improvement in strength than supplementing with an equivalent amount of only carbohydrate.

The second study found that a supplement containing creatine, whey and carbs provided a degree of fat loss, increases in lean mass, and strength and muscle gains that were superior to what happened with the same supplement minus the creatine.

The third study examined the issue of supplement timing, involving the intake of a whey-and-creatine compound immediately before and after exercise. That was compared to taking the same supplement at times other than the pre- and postworkout periods. The study confirmed that taking the supplement just before and after a workout led to improved body composition, as well as strength and muscle gains. The supplement contained 40 grams of protein, 43 grams of carbs, 0.5 grams of fat and seven grams of creatine. With that level of nutrition the participants

Mu

scle

Mem

ori

es

Visit us at Home-Gym.com or call 800-447-0008

Over 800 best-selling products online

Breakthrough research in exercise metabolism now reveals this fact: What you consume (or don’t consume) immediately after training plays a critical role in determining your success or failure! That time period is known as the “anabolic window” of growth.

The biggest mistake many bodybuilders make is eating a meal of chicken breasts, baked potato or rice and vegetables after a workout. This is an approach doomed to fail because by the time this meal digests, the anabolic window has slammed shut.

The best way to produce this potent anabolic effect is simply by drinking an amino acid-and-carbohydrate supplement within 15 minutes after training! RecoverX™ offers the ideal combination and provides the perfect blend of nutrients for postworkout anabolic acceleration.

RecoverX™ contains 40 grams of the quickest-acting bio-available protein from hydrolyzed whey—extremely fast protein for immediate delivery—whey protein concentrate, glutamine peptides, arginine and 60 grams of carbohydrate to give you the necessary insulin spike.

RecoverX™ is the perfect postworkout meal to kick your muscle growth into overdrive!

©2

00

6 H

om

e-G

ym

.com

PERFECT POSTWORKOUT MEAL

To Kick-Start Immediate Muscle Growth After You Train

RecoverX3 lbs. 14 oz.

$30.95

TM

Visit us at Home-Gym.com or call 800-447-0008

Whatever You Need—Wherever You Train™

©2

00

6 H

om

e-G

ym

.com

Red Dragon120 capsules

$29.95

The biggest bodybuilders know that

the last few grueling reps of a set are

the key growth reps. It’s why they fight

through the pain of muscle burn on

every work set-—so they trigger the

mass-building machinery. But sometimes

it’s not enough; the burn is too fierce.

Fortunately, there’s now a potent new

weapon in this massive firefight to help

you get bigger and stronger faster.

Red Dragon is a new beta-alanine

supplement that packs your muscles

with carnosine—up to 60 percent more.

Muscle biopsies show that the largest

bodybuilders have significantly more

carnosine in their fast-twitch muscle

fibers than sedentary individuals for good

reason: Carnosine buffers the burn to give

muscles more “grow power” on every set.

The bigger and stronger a muscle gets,

the more carnosine it needs to perform

at higher intensity levels. You must keep

your muscles loaded with carnosine to

grow larger and stronger. It all boils down

to intensity and the ability to buffer waste

products—hydrogen ions and lactic

acid—so the muscle doesn’t shut down

before growth activation.

Straight carnosine supplements degrade

too rapidly to reach the muscles; however,

more than 20 new studies document that

beta-alanine is converted to carnosine

very efficiently. All it takes is 1 1/2 grams

twice a day, and you’ll see new size in

your muscles and feel the difference in

the gym—you can double or triple your

growth-rep numbers! Imagine how fast

your size and strength will increase when

you ride the Dragon!

Note: Red Dragon™ is the first pure

carnosine synthesizer—so powerful it’s

patented. It contains beta-alanine, the

amino acid that supercharges muscle

cells with carnosine.

GRIND OUT THE GROWTH REPS™

Beta-Alanine Gives Your Muscles More Grow Power™

116 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

The conference also featured a number of interesting poster presentations that briefly summarized new research:

•A hydrolysate, or fraction, of whey protein called MGNF-1 lowered the levels of inflammatory chemicals in muscle while promoting cell growth.

•A study comparing the eat-ing habits of vegetarians and nonvegetarians found that vege tarians not only didn’t lack any required nutrients but also had better-balanced diets than nonvegetarians—likely due to a greater variety of food.

•A study of L-carnitine intake in runners from India found that taking 2.5 grams of carnitine for 21 days led to substantial increase in VO2max, or the ability to take in and use oxygen. That would translate into increased exercise endurance.

•A study compared the effects of

two types of creatine supplements—creatine combined with pinitol and plain creatine monohydrate—on exercise performance. While some previous research has found a synergistic effect when pinitol combines with creatine, this study revealed no differences in exercise performance from either form of creatine supplementation.

•The impact of beta-alanine supplements on isometric endurance of the knee extensors, or front-thigh muscles, was measured on subjects who got 6.4 grams of beta-alanine, along with simple sugars, for 28 and 14 days. Previous studies have reported 60 and 80 percent increases in muscle carnosine in those who took beta-alanine for four- and 10-week periods. This time around, 28 days of using beta-alanine led to an 11.1 percent increase in isometric muscle endurance, while using it for 14 days led to a 14.4 percent rise.

The effect was ascribed to a higher level of muscle buffering, evidenced by a reduction in the acid levels that lead to muscle fatigue.

•In another beta-alanine study the effect of giving trainees 800 milligrams of beta-alanine four times a day for four weeks was compared to training without beta-alanine. Training alone didn’t increase carnosine levels in muscle after four weeks, but taking a beta-alanine supplement while training did. A 10- and 12-week study of beta-alanine use also showed higher carnosine muscle levels.

•The conference featured the first studies to examine the effects of a controversial arachidonic acid supplement when used with training. Arachidonic acid is a fatty acid that is the cornerstone of a number of prostaglandins, which are hormonelike chemicals produced in the body. At least one prostaglandin is known to promote muscle size and strength gains. The controversy arises because arachidonic acid is not only found abundantly in many protein foods,

Carnitine increases the density of androgen cell receptors, which leads to greater testosterone uptake into muscles.

Taking beta-alanine for only 14 days resulted in a 14.4 percent rise in muscle endurance due to better muscle buffering.M

od

el: Joh

n H

an

sen

116 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com116 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

(continued from page 112)

Mu

scle

Mem

ori

es

118 NOVEMBER 2006 \ www.ironmanmagazine.com

such as meat, but is also responsible for gener ating in flammatory prostaglandins that produce pain and illness. Some drugs that treat pain interfere with the con-version of arachidonic acid into those in-flammatory chemicals. The purveyor of a commercial arachidonic acid supplement claims that regular intense exercise leads to a depletion of arachidonic acid in the muscle, resulting in a lowered synthesis of anabolic prostaglandins. Supplementing with arachidonic acid restores the body’s allegedly depleted stores.

In the study presented at the ISSN meeting, subjects used a commercial arachidonic acid supplement for 50 days while engaged in a weight-training program. Thirty-one subjects took a gram a day of either a corn oil placebo or an arachidonic acid supplement and ate a high-protein diet, averaging two grams of protein per kilogram of bodyweight daily. There was an increase in peak muscle power in those using the genuine arachidonic acid supplement, but neither group experienced a change in body mass.

Another study looked at the hormonal and intramuscular effects of using the arachidonic acid supplement for 50 days. The study protocols were similar to those of the other arachidonic acid study. Those on the supplement experienced an increase in prostaglandin F2A, the chemical linked to muscle gains, along with a decrease in the inflammatory cytokine, interleukin-6, which has catabolic effects in muscle. Arachidonic acid is most often linked to inflammatory reactions in the body because it is a precursor of various inflammatory prostaglandins, including F2A. In any case, the researchers deemed the increase in F2A found in the arachidonic acid group to be “nonsignificant.”

In a 50-day safety study of arachi-donic acid the supplement proved to be well tolerated, without altering whole blood, liver or kidney safety markers.

•A study compared arginine alpha ketoglutarate, a popular ingredient found in nitric oxide–boosting supplements, with two substances: creatine ethyl ester, a newer form of creatine touted as being far more effective than creatine

monohydrate, and a proprietary commercial supplement containing creatine gluconate and glycerol.

Four weeks of arginine alpha ketoglutarate use had no effect on adaptations to weight training, such as bodyfat loss, lean mass or muscular performance gains. Creatine ester exerted modest effects on bodyweight and lean mass. The creatine gluconate supplement proved the superior of the three supplements tested in terms of increases in bodyweight, lean mass and repetitions done to failure during training.

•Eurycoma longifolia, also known as longjack or tongat ali, is an herbal preparation that’s supposed to increase testosterone in the body. Researchers examined the effects of EL on testosterone and cortisone levels during intense endurance exercise. The human subjects (most prior EL studies used rats and mice) took either 100 milligrams of EL or a placebo 30 minutes prior to engaging in intensive running.

Cortisol levels were 32.3 percent lower in the EL group than in the placebo group, and testosterone levels were 16.4 percent higher. Those findings led the authors to conclude that

taking EL before intense exercise may increase testosterone levels while lowering cortisol levels, a definite anabolic response.

•The effects of using a branched-chain amino acid supplement on cortisol levels during endurance exercise were at the center of a look at a commercial blend of BCAAs consisting of three parts leucine, one part isoleucine and one part valine. The supplement provided a total of 750 to 1,500 milligrams of BCAAs, depending on the dose, and as little as 750 milligrams, or a total dose of three grams over 24 hours, significantly reduced the cortisol levels produced during intense endurance exercise.

The study underscores the importance of taking BCAAs, especially when on a limited-calorie diet that features aerobic exercise. Getting supplemental BCAAs under such conditions may spare vital muscle losses.

There you have it—a portion of the information presented at the ISSN conference. Even given its abbreviated nature, the data should prove useful and practical. IM

H

N

HH

HC

C

OO

R

Mod

el: L

ee A

pp

ers

on

Branched-chain amino acids reduced cortisol levels during intense endurance exercise.

Mu

scle

Mem

ori

es