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Protein And Bodybuilding The Complete Breakdown
  Posted on Tue 19 Feb 2008 (704 reads)


3. Whey protein is the fastest absorbing protein and a good use for post workout nutrition

4. Casein protein is the slowest absorbing making it a great source for a overnight protein.Some sources include milk cottage cheese.

5. Whey has a great combo of (BCAA) AKA Branch Chain
Amino Acids act as nitrogen carriers, which assist muscles in
synthesizing other amino acids required for anabolic effect
[Transamination]. They also stimulate production of insulin that allows
circulating blood sugar to be taken up by the muscle cells and used as
an energy source. Further, during a fat-reduction cycle, Amino Acids
function in an anti-catabolic manner, thus helping the body to spare
lean muscle tissue. and I believe bcaa supplements are unnecesary because over dosing some may have effects on others and why pay so uch oney for something you can get from your whey.

More in depth article below

Muscle is protein, so bodybuilders associate eating more dietary protein with gaining more muscle.
Devouring egg whites by the dozen, meat by the pound and protein powder
by the bucketful is the norm for hard training physique athletes. But
is all this carnivorism really necessary? Why the infatuation with
eating huge amounts of protein? Are bodybuilders correct in their
habitual practice of pounding down the protein or is this immoderation
unfounded? To answer these questions, it is first necessary obtain a
solid understanding of what protein is and how it is used in the body.
Only then can we objectively look at the protein consumption practices
of bodybuilders and compare them to what the scientific evidence says
in order to make some sensible and productive recommendations.


Protein Turnover; the dynamic human body


Although your body appears
quite solid, it is always in a constant state of flux. The Greek
philosopher Heraclitus said, "You cannot step in the same river twice."
What he meant was that a river may look the same every day, but it
never is the same because of the constant flow of new water running
through it. This is also true of the human body. Body protein is
constantly being turned over as old cells die and new cells replace
them. Best-selling author and mind-body expert Dr. Deepak Chopra
describes this ongoing cellular renewal process like this:


"It is as if you lived in
a building whose bricks were systematically taken out and replaced
every year. If you keep the same blueprint then it will still look like
the same building. But it won't be the same in actuality. The human
body also stands there, looking much the same from day to day, but
through the process of respiration, digestion, elimination and so
forth, it is constantly and ever in exchange with the rest of the
world."


Quantum physicists have
proven that 98% of the atoms in your body are replaced within one year.
In three months your body produces an entirely new skeleton. Every six
weeks, all the cells have been replaced in your liver. You have a new
stomach lining every five days. You are continually replacing old blood
cells with new ones. Every month you produce an entirely new skin as
dead cells are shed and new cells grow underneath. The proteins in your
muscles are continually turned over as muscle is broken down and new
tissue is synthesized. Every cell in your body is constantly being
recycled.


Where do all these new cells
come from? The answer of course, is from the protein foods you consume
every day. That's why the saying, "You are what you eat" is literally
true from a molecular standpoint. Once you've accepted this maxim,
you'll start being awfully careful about what you put in your body
every day.


Protein 101: What is protein anyway?


Its not surprising that
bodybuilders put so much emphasis on protein. After all, protein is
construction material for the human body like bricks are for a
building. Body structures made from protein include skin, hair, nails,
bones, connective tissue and of course skeletal muscle. Other proteins
in your body include antibodies, enzymes, hormones such as insulin, and
transporters such as hemoglobin. Next to water, protein is the most
abundant substance in the body, making up approximately 15-20% of your
weight. Of most interest to the bodybuilder is the fact that 60-70% of
all protein in the body is located in the skeletal muscles. In order
for muscle growth to occur, every day you must consume more protein
than your body utilizes.


Like fats and carbohydrates,
proteins are also composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. The
difference is nitrogen. Only protein can bring nitrogen into the body.
Because muscle tissue contains most of the body's protein and protein
contains nitrogen, scientists can study the effect of dietary protein
on muscle growth by comparing the amount of nitrogen consumed with the
amount excreted (in feces, urine and sweat). If the intake of nitrogen
is greater than the amount excreted, then we know that protein is being
retained and new muscle is being synthesized. This is known as positive
nitrogen balance. If more nitrogen is excreted than consumed, you are
in negative nitrogen balance, indicating that protein is being broken
down and muscle is being lost.


Amino acids: The building blocks of protein


The smallest units of a
protein are called amino acids. Like bricks in a wall, amino acids are
the building blocks of protein. Just as glycogen is formed from the
linkage of numerous glucose molecules, proteins are formed from the
joining of numerous amino acids. There are 20 amino acids that are
required for growth by the human body. From these 20 amino acids, there
are tens of thousands of different protein molecules that can be
formed. Each protein is assembled from the bonding of different amino
acids into various configurations. Growth hormone, for example, is a
protein chain of 156 amino acids.


"Amino acids are somewhat
like letters in the alphabet. If you had only the letter G, all you
could write would be a string of Gs: G-G-G-G-G-G-G-G. But with 20
different letters available, you could create poems, songs, or novels.
The 20 amino acids can be linked together in an even greater variety of
sequences than are possible for letters in a word or words in a
sentence. The variety of possible sequences for polypeptide chains is
tremendous." -Eleanor Whitney and Sharon Rolfes, "Understanding
Nutrition."


Essential vs. Non-essential amino acids


Out of the twenty amino
acids, the human body can make eleven of them. These are called the
non-essential amino acids (also known as "dispensable amino acids). The
other nine amino acids are called "essential amino acids" or
(indispensable amino acids). Essential amino acids are those which
cannot be manufactured by your body and must be supplied from your
food.


Essential (indispensable) amino acids



Histidine

Isoleucine

Leucine

Valine

Lysine

Methionine

Phenylalanine

Threonine

Tryptophan



Non essential (dispensable) amino acids



Alanine

Arginine

Asparagine

Aspartic Acid

Cysteine

Glutamic acid

Glutamine

Glycine

Proline

Serine

Tyrosine



Why bodybuilders must eat "complete" proteins every three hours


Foods that contain a balanced
combination of all the essential and nonessential amino acids in the
exact amounts required by the body for growth are called "complete
proteins." In order for the body to synthesize muscle, all the
essential amino acids must be available simultaneously. Any
non-essential amino acids that are in short supply can be produced by
the liver, but if an essential amino acid is missing, the body must
break down its own proteins to obtain it. To prevent muscle cell
breakdown, dietary protein must supply all the essential amino acids.
If your diet is missing any essential amino acids, protein synthesis
will be inhibited.


Carbohydrates have a storage
depot in the body called glycogen. Glycogen can be stored in the
muscles and liver and then drawn upon hours or even days later when it
is needed. Proteins cannot be stored in the body. There is only a very
small and transient amino acid pool in the bloodstream. To maintain the
optimal environment for muscle growth (positive nitrogen balance),
complete proteins must be eaten with every meal. This explains the
rationale behind the common bodybuilding practice of eating six
protein-containing meals per day (one about every three hours.)


Protein Quality: Complete vs. Incomplete proteins


Protein isn't just found in
meat, eggs and milk. There is also protein in vegetables, beans,
legumes, and grains. However, the protein in these foods is not
considered "complete" because it lacks one or more of the essential
amino acids. Generally speaking, proteins from vegetable sources are
lower in quality and that's the reason they are eschewed by
bodybuilders. The complete proteins are those that come from animal
sources such as eggs, milk and meat.


Many grains and legumes
contain substantial amounts of protein, but none provide the full array
of essential amino acids. Beans, for example, are very high in protein
with about 15 grams per cup, however, they are missing the essential
amino acid Methionine. Similarly, grains are lacking the essential
amino acid Lysine. It has been frequently pointed out that combining
two incomplete sources of vegetable protein such as rice and beans
provides you with the full complement of essential amino acids. This
may be true, but there's a decided difference between simply meeting
your minimum amino acid requirements for health and consuming the
optimal quality of protein for building muscle. Combining complementary
vegetable sources of protein just doesn't cut it for the serious
bodybuilder.


Is "Vegetarian bodybuilder" an oxymoron?


A pure vegetarian (vegan)
diet is not conducive to building muscle. One thing you will never see
is a rock-hard, massive and muscular vegan. Lacto-vegetarians (those
who use dairy products) and ovo-lacto-vegetarians (those who use eggs
and dairy products) can build excellent physiques. Bodybuilding
champion Bill Pearl is just one example. Pearl is well known for his
lifelong aversion to eating meat, but he does use complete proteins
from eggs or dairy products. With this semi-vegetarian approach, Pearl
won the Mr. America and Mr. Universe tittles and became a legend in the
bodybuilding and fitness world.


The bottom line is that you
can get fit and healthy without consuming animal proteins, but unless
you include eggs or dairy products, you will never develop a physique
worthy of the bodybuilding stage. If a hard and muscular physique is
what you're after, then heed the advice of Robert Kennedy, publisher of
Muscle Mag International and author of "Rock Hard, Supernutrition for
Bodybuilders:"


"The bodybuilder would be
ill-advised to adopt a true vegetarian diet. You can be one of the
millions who are eating less meat and more vegetables. You may even
want to drop all flesh entirely. But is would be a mistake to try for
pure vegetarianism. Only 3.7% of Americans consider themselves to be
vegetarians, and of those only a fraction of 1% are purists. In the
bodybuilding world of champions, that percentage is currently.... ZERO!"


Lean sources of complete proteins


Complete proteins come from
animal sources including meat, eggs and dairy products. The obvious
problem with animal proteins is that they also contain large amounts of
saturated fat. To stay lean, bodybuilders must always keep fats in the
diet low. Fortunately, fat from animal proteins can easily be avoided
simply by making the correct choices. For example, use egg whites
instead of egg yolks, lean meats such as turkey breast and chicken
breast instead of fatty cuts of meat, and 1% low fat or non-fat dairy
products instead of whole milk dairy products. These are some of the
best sources of lean protein for bodybuilding purposes:



Chicken breast

Turkey breast

Fish

Shellfish (shrimp, lobster, crab, clams, etc)

Egg whites

Lean red meats (top round, lean sirloin, and flank)

Nonfat or low fat dairy products

Protein powders (Whey protein, for example)



The great debate; The RDA vs. the "protein pushers"


For years a heated
controversy has raged over whether or not extra protein will boost
muscle development. On one side of the debate you have the conservative
dietitians and medical community who stubbornly insist that the
recommended Daily Allowance (RDA) is all you need to develop muscle.
The RDA's are the official government guidelines set by the national
research council. Currently the RDA for protein is based on body weight
and is set at .8 grams per kilogram of body weight (that's .36 grams
per lb. of body weight). For a 172 lb. man that equates to a paltry 62
grams per day. It is important to note that the RDA's were developed
for the "average" sedentary person to avoid deficiency, not for
athletes in hard training to gain muscle and strength. In fact, the RDA
handbook even says, "no added allowance is made for stresses
encountered in daily living which can give rise to increases in urinary
nitrogen output."


On the other side of the
debate, you have the "protein pushers" who claim that megadoses of
protein are the key to muscular growth. These high protein fanatics
often suggest intakes of 400-500 grams a day or more. More often than
not, the protein pushers are in some way affiliated with a supplement
company and have a vested interest in selling you protein powder. In
other cases, these high protein advocates may be professional
bodybuilders who are taking large amounts of anabolic steroids, which
can allow the body to utilize more protein than normal.


So who is right, the
conservative medical and scientific community or the protein pushers?
The answer is neither; the optimal intake is clearly somewhere in
between the two extremes. An "optimal" protein intake for bodybuilders
is still unknown at this time and will require further research, but
one thing is for certain: The RDA is not enough to support the added
requirements for intense bodybuilding training. Even the RDA handbook
itself says, "No added allowance is made here for stresses encountered
in daily living which can give rise to transient increases in urinary
nitrogen output. It is assumed that the subjects of experiments forming
the basis for the requirement estimates are usually exposed to the same
stresses as the population generally." If bodybuilding isn't an
"unusual stress" beyond what is normally encountered in daily living
then I don't know what is.


What the current research says about protein and bodybuilding


Research has conclusively
proven that exercise increases protein needs. Dr. Peter Lemon is the
world's leading researcher on protein requirements and athletes. In the
journal "Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise" (19:5,
S179-S190,1986) Dr. Lemon writes;


"Several types of evidence
indicate that exercise causes substantial changes in protein
metabolism. In fact, recent data suggests that the protein recommended
dietary allowance might actually be 100% higher for individuals who
exercise on a regular basis. Optimal intakes, although unknown, may be
even higher, especially for individuals attempting to increase muscle
mass and strength."


Dr. Lemon's most recent
research published in "Nutrition Reviews," (54:S169-175, 1996)
indicates that strength athletes need up to 1.8g of protein per kg. of
body weight to maintain positive nitrogen balance. That's .8 grams per
lb. of body weight or almost 140 grams a day for someone who weighs 172
lbs. This is very close to the long-held belief of bodybuilders that 1
gram per pound of body weight is optimal. Some studies have shown that
even higher protein intakes may be necessary in hard training strength
athletes. In one study of Polish weightlifters (Nutr. Metabolism
12:259-274), 5 of 10 athletes were still in negative nitrogen balance
even while consuming 250% of the RDA.


So much research has been
done on protein and athletes that it's amazing that so many
conservative registered dietitians and medical professionals still
cling to the outdated notion that the RDA for protein is sufficient for
muscle growth. The biggest irony is the fact that many of these "RDA
pushers" are overweight, flabby, out of shape professors, researchers
or white lab coat types. I don't know about you, but I have a very hard
time taking advice from "armchair experts" who don't walk the walk.
After years of being criticized by the academic and scientific
communities for their "excess" protein intakes, bodybuilders today have
received their vindication; It is no longer a theory that protein
intakes higher than the RDA are more effective for building muscle, it
is now scientific fact.







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