The NxLabs Body Challenge Blog

Archive for the ‘Body Science’ Category

Creatine Plus Heavy Weight Training Promotes Satellite Cell Proliferation

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

Satellite cells are immature cells that surround muscle tissue. When muscle tissue is broken down during weight training, a cascade of biochemical and hormonal reactions can happen to send a message to a satellite cell to fuse to the damaged muscle tissue. In doing so, the muscle tissue gains the nuclei from the satellite cell, which aids in repair and growth. Nuclei are the brain centers of the cell and are responsible for signaling protein synthesis (new muscle). Danish researchers found that 16 weeks of creatine supplementation along with heavy-resistance training not only increases the number of satellite cells, but also the number nuclei in the muscle.

J Physiol. 2006 Jun 1; 573(Pt 2):525-34.

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Whey & Casein Combo Increases Lean Body Mass

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Whey and casein are proteins both derived from milk. While each type of protein offers a different amino acid profile, they’re also digested at different rates in the body. Whey is digested fast, while casein takes a lot longer, and therefore, considered a slow-digesting protein. Research has shown that whey can spike protein synthesis (muscle building), but only for a short time. On the other hand, casein has been shown to inhibit protein degradation (muscle breakdown) over a long period of time. This has led many bodybuilders to combine the two for better results in muscle growth – a practice that recent research also supports.

In a 10-week study conducted at Baylor University, researchers split 36 males randomly into 3 groups, who were given a different supplement prior to weight training. Group 1 received a placebo; Group 2 consumed 40 g of whey and 8 g of casein; while Group 3 ingested 40 g of whey, 3 g of branch chain amino acids and 5 g of glutamine. The results showed that Group 2 had the greatest increase in fat-free mass.

J Strength Cond Res. 2006 Aug; 20(3):643-53

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One Perfect Rep

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

After witnessing the Gong Show last night at the gym, I find it necessary to clear up once and for all when it’s OK to cheat and when it’s not.

  1. When the girlfriend is out of town: NOT OK
  2. On a test you opted not to study for but party instead – the weekend your girlfriend was out of town: NOT OK
  3. When you’ve done 7 reps in a set with perfect form and feel, you could still squeeze one more out to achieve failure: OK

It’s an epidemic that’s plaguing gyms across the world. The bucking of hips, the swinging of shoulders, even the craning of necks. The affliction? Those who think every rep should be a cheat rep. Perfect from when doing an exercise is a rarity these days.

Little does one know that by cheating every rep. you’re risking injury and actually robbing yourself of gains. There is a reason an exercise is done a certain way. It’s time to get your mind away from quantity and focus on quality for a while. Do a reality check. Drop the weights you’re using by half and do each rep. slowly, while you watch yourself in the mirror. Better yet have a buddy or training partner watch you. Are your hands in the correct position on the bar? Are you bringing the bar down low enough to get the full range of motion? Are you putting as much energy into the negative movement as the positive one? And finally, are you breathing with every rep?

This might seem like a checklist for a rookie, but look at the guys around you. The pride of adding an extra plate can come at the cost of form and that will hurt muscle development and can lead to injury. Perfect form beats a loaded bar any day for gains that last. Whether you’re a powerlifter, a bodybuilder, a football player or somewhere in between, it’s all about the right technique first; the weight will come.

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Nutritional Discipline

Tuesday, February 3rd, 2009

As odd as it sounds – you shouldn’t trust your gut when sticking to a meal plan. No matter how strict you may think you’re being, nothing keeps you as honest as sticking to a nutrition journal. A daily account of not only what you plan to take in, but what you actually did take in is one of the best ways to stay on track. Not only will you have the ability to plan your meals ahead of time, it is an easier way for you to track calories, proteins and carbs in advance. Just like keeping a journal of training, with a solid record of your diet you can retrace your steps to see where you went right and where you went wrong. Then from there you can make the necessary tweaks to take your progress even further.

Don’t want to carry a big fat notebook around with you? No problem, now there are no excuses when your cell phone or your PDA both have calendar functions that can be synched to your online schedule. Plan out your six meals a day in advance and you’ll have access to them at any time. You can even set alarms to keep you on track during busy times at work. The key to success is to be honest with yourself; if you know that you need a snack after every workout, write it down. It’s tougher to cheat if everything is accounted. It will make it easier for you to be disciplined and it will make your shopping list that much more accurate.

Got a few tips about sticking to the meal plan? I’d like to hear them. Just post them up in the comments section.

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Your Nutrition Must Support Your Goals – Part 2

Tuesday, January 27th, 2009

If you’re seriously after optimal progress in either direction – fat loss or muscle gains – you’ll do far, far better if your nutrition supports those goals. If you’re chasing fat loss, again, you need to be eating in a deficit (we’ll go into more specifics on how to set up a fat-loss diet shortly). If you want to pack on some beef, you really need to be eating a lot.

There’s an old saying that says if you’re not growing, you’re not eating enough and honestly, for the most part, it’s true. The biggest reason more people don’t get bigger and stronger is that they simply do not have enough calories/energy coming in to 1) sustain them, and 2) support the growth and maintenance of new muscle tissue.

So let’s say you want to get in shape for the NxLabs Hardcore Bodybuilding Challenge and need the full six months to transform your physique and reach your goals. I suggest you take a look at yourself, do a hard assessment and determine what you need to do first. With 24 weeks, you have the time to split up those weeks into different sub-goals to reach your overall goal. Maybe you start out trying to add some size, while minimizing fat gains and then you transition into trying to get ripped while maintaining some of the newly earned muscle. Or maybe you have a lot of fat to lose in which case you want to jump right into a fat-loss program. Maybe you’re in desperate need of more muscle. Regardless, the bottom line is that your training, your cardio, what you do in the gym, while important, is going to end up being secondary to ensuring that your nutrition supports your physique goals.

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Your Nutrition Must Support Your Goals – Part 1

Thursday, January 22nd, 2009

One of the biggest mistakes people – both males and females – make in their pursuit of physique improvements, whether that is fat loss or muscle gain, is not ensuring that their nutritional program supports their goals. Sounds logical – doesn’t it?

If you want to lose fat, you have to eat in a way that supports fat loss. If you want to gain muscle, you have to eat in a way that supports muscular gains. Yet look around your gym. How many people ever really look much different? I’d say not too many. It’s not for lack of trying in the gym, as I’m sure you see many of the same people week in and week out and they certainly appear to be working hard. They’re lifting weights, they’re doing their cardio, but for some reason, they don’t look much different. Why? Nutrition! Their diet doesn’t support their goals.

Now if you stopped and asked any one of these individuals what their goals were, they might say they’re trying to get bigger … and leaner. That’s what most of us tend to want, but the problem is trying to do both at the same time. I’ll keep this simple, but basically, to lose body fat you have to be in a caloric deficit at the end of the day. You can get there by dietary restriction (eating less calories than your body requires to maintain its current weight); by exercise; or by some combination of both – the latter being optimal.

Contrast that to the goals of gaining muscle. You need to be in an energy surplus to gain muscle. That begs the question – how can you be in a caloric deficit and a caloric surplus at the same time? You can’t. They’re mutually exclusive positions. Now maybe you’ll argue the point of simultaneous fat loss and muscle gain with me – what we affectionately term a “recomp” – but let me try a little logic. First the easy one: does it make sense that the body would be forced to call on fat stores (an energy reserve) when it’s getting a lot of calories? There’s no reason to.

On the flip side, when you’re eating in a deficit, your body is trying to survive. You’re not providing it with enough energy to sustain itself, hence the need for it to call on fat reserves to maintain metabolically active tissue and bodily functions. Ok, pretty straightforward. But to bring some logic back into the equation, does it make sense that your body would go through the trouble of adding more metabolically active tissue – muscle, which needs to be grown AND sustained – when it already doesn’t have enough energy/calories to sustain its present self? The process of adding size to the body is an energy costly process. That’s a huge strike against those who state their goals as being simultaneous fat loss and muscle gains. More often than not, you’re going to be disappointed.

Now does that mean that one can’t ever gain muscle while simultaneously losing fat? No, it doesn’t. However, it is very unlikely unless you fit into one of the following categories – you’re a “newbie” just starting out, you’re coming back from a lay off and as such are basically in a de-trained state, or you’re new to “effective” training.

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Don’t Ignore Your Legs!

Monday, January 19th, 2009

I don’t care what gym you go to, we’ve all seen that guy – he’s been working out for a few months and is starting to make some gains, but something is missing. Unfortunately for him, he’s neglected a very important muscle group and he’s starting to look like a flamingo.

Sure no one wants to focus on their lower body when they first start out, because it’s not a showcase muscle group and let’s be honest, leg training is both taxing and painful. I know I’m not painting a pretty picture here, but you know you’re committed to this sport for life on the day you wake up excited to jump into the power rack and start dusting the floor with your ass by doing full-range squats. Besides, if you can stomach eating tuna from the can on a daily basis, you can churn out a gut-wrenching leg workout routine once a week.

When you’re choosing leg workouts, try compound or multi-joint exercises that hit the legs as a unit. While there are benefits to isolation or single-joint exercise, like leg extensions and hamstring curls, the inherent challenge of full squats (a.k.a. back squats) will keep you focused on days when lifting has become a chore. Vary up your workout to make sure the gains in your legs match those of your upper body.

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Balancing Your Guns

Friday, January 9th, 2009

The front biceps pose or the “double gun shot” is the one pose that everyone has “hit” at some point in their youth.  Find me a kid who hasn’t done it into a mirror and I’ll guarantee you he doesn’t have arms.

It’s in our DNA to show off the size of your bi’s.  That being said, don’t forget your arms are comprised of more than one muscle group. The triceps (the muscle group on the other side of your bi’s) and the brachialis (which is found underneath the bi’s) are muscles you’ll have to focus on for full arm development.  Sure we all want to focus on our biceps because it’s an easier muscle to show off, but keep this in mind: The triceps make up two-thirds of your arm and developing the brachialis will help push out your biceps to give you a greater peak. So if you’re looking to build an impressive set of arms, then don’t forget about these muscles!

For your triceps, try doing close-grip bench presses, dips and variations of triceps extensions. While performing hammer, concentration and preacher curls for your brachialis (Note: These exercises will also stimulate the muscle fibers in your biceps). And remember, it’s not always about the exercises we like to do, it’s also about what we need to do.

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