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Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?

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  • Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?

    Great paper from Alan Aragon, one of the most respected guys in the exercise/nutrition science field. This guy knows what he is talking about, guys!

    Abstract

    Nutrient timing is a popular nutritional strategy that involves the consumption of combinations of nutrients--primarily protein and carbohydrate--in and around an exercise session. Some have claimed that this approach can produce dramatic improvements in body composition. It has even been postulated that the timing of nutritional consumption may be more important than the absolute daily intake of nutrients. The post-exercise period is widely considered the most critical part of nutrient timing. Theoretically, consuming the proper ratio of nutrients during this time not only initiates the rebuilding of damaged muscle tissue and restoration of energy reserves, but it does so in a supercompensated fashion that enhances both body composition and exercise performance. Several researchers have made reference to an anabolic “window of opportunity” whereby a limited time exists after training to optimize training-related muscular adaptations. However, the importance - and even the existence - of a post-exercise ‘window’ can vary according to a number of factors. Not only is nutrient timing research open to question in terms of applicability, but recent evidence has directly challenged the classical view of the relevance of post-exercise nutritional intake with respect to anabolism. Therefore, the purpose of this paper will be twofold: 1) to review the existing literature on the effects of nutrient timing with respect to post-exercise muscular adaptations, and; 2) to draw relevant conclusions that allow practical, evidence-based nutritional recommendations to be made for maximizing the anabolic response to exercise.

    JISSN | Full text | Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?

    Editorial Comments:

    Looks like pre- and post-exercise protein intake is good, carbs, not necessary. So, chug your protein, punt the malto.

    From towards the end of the paper:

    ..high-quality protein dosed at 0.4–0.5 g/kg of LBM at both pre- and post-exercise is a simple, relatively fail-safe general guideline that reflects the current evidence showing a maximal acute anabolic effect of 20–40 g [53,84,85]. For example, someone with 70 kg of LBM would consume roughly 28–35 g protein in both the pre- and post exercise meal. Exceeding this would be have minimal detriment if any, whereas significantly under-shooting or neglecting it altogether would not maximize the anabolic response.

    ...the increase in post-exercise muscle protein balance from ingesting 25 g whey isolate was not improved by an additional 50 g maltodextrin during a 3-hour recovery period. For the goal of maximizing rates of muscle gain, these findings support the broader objective of meeting total daily carbohydrate need instead of specifically timing its constituent doses.
    Last edited by Scrumhalf; 02-03-14, 11:33 PM.

  • #2
    Nice find re: a really hotly debated topic - although I already know the posts that are coming...

    Keep em' coming - that's like the 3rd interesting read in the last week, Scrum. Thanks!

    Comment


    • #3
      No problem. Yes, it was good to see a no-BS expert weigh in on this topic that has been hitherto (at least in my experience) been debated only by the bro-scientists.

      Comment


      • #4
        Here is the link to the original paper in pdf:

        http://www.jissn.com/content/pdf/1550-2783-10-5.pdf

        Comment


        • #5
          This was probably most surprising to me:

          "Studies show that muscle protein breakdown is only slightly elevated immediately post-exercise and then rapidly rises thereafter [36]. In the fasted state, muscle protein breakdown is significantly heightened at 195 minutes following resistance exercise, resulting in a net negative protein balance [37]. These values are increased as much as 50% at the 3 hour mark, and elevated proteolysis can persist for up to 24 hours of the post-workout period [36]."

          Comment


          • #6
            Yeah, I have read that before. Fasted exercise is likely detrimental, but in the grand scheme of things, I don't know if just eating enough after the workout can make up for it, as evidenced by this statement:

            the recommendation for lifters to
            spike insulin post-exercise is somewhat trivial. The clas-
            sical post-exercise objective to quickly reverse catabolic
            processes to promote recovery and growth may only be
            applicable in the absence of a properly constructed pre-
            exercise meal


            Suffice it to say that there these metabolic processes are very complicated and not well understood. The paper does lay out the case very effectively though for depletion mode workouts during carb cycling and how one can deplete muscle glycogen thoroughly and then replenish during the carb load.

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