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Untitled Document
MUSCLE AID
USEFUL FOR: MASS GAIN • FAT LOSS • STRENGTH • BEGINNERS • ENDURANCE
WARNING: MAY CAUSE YOU TO ACHIEVE YOUR FITNESS GOALS FASTER THAN YOU EVER THOUGHT
POSSIBLE
YOUR SUPPLEMENT START-UP KIT
DO YOU WANT TO GET BIGGER? GROW STRONGER? DROP FAT? REACH YOUR GOALS FASTER WITH
THESE FIVE SUPPLEMENT STACKS BY CHRIS ACETO
1) MASS-GAIN KIT
• Protein Powder
• Carbohydrate Powder
• Creatine
• ZMA
• Arginine
CONTENTS: The trick with mass gain is to record a calorie surplus
at the end of the day while providing a non-stop influx of protein to build and
repair muscle.
Five to six meals a day is a must, with powders a convenient substitute for 2–3
of those. You’ll also need hormonal support via ZMA (zinc-magnesium complex)
and arginine, as well as creatine for maximal growth.
EFFECTIVENESS: If you experience a steady increase in bodyweight,
you’re
succeeding. To build mass and to measure your progress, you ought to gain at
least a pound of fat-free bodyweight every 2–3 weeks.
HOW THE KIT WORKS: Creatine increases strength and muscle tissue.
ZMA helps boost testosterone levels. And combining whey powders with fast-digesting
carbohydrate
powders before and after training can protect your muscles from damage, reversing
muscle breakdown associated with hardcore lifting. Arginine boosts growth hormone
production and increases blood flow to muscles, thus enhancing the “pump”.
USAGE: Try 30–40 grams of protein mixed with 50–80 grams of carbohydrate
powder both before and after training. Throw in 3–5 grams of creatine with
the post-training drink. Pre-training, take 3–5 grams of arginine, and
take another 3–5 grams before bed. Take ZMA as label directs about one
hour before bedtime on an empty stomach.
2) FAT-LOSS KIT
Whey Protein Powder • Branched-Chain Amino Acids • Guggulsterones • Capsicum • Calcium
CONTENTS: Eliminating excess calories and increasing expenditure
via cardio and hard training is the critical first step. The real secret to success:
preserving
metabolic-boosting muscle tissue, which can quickly be lost when dieting. Protein
supplements and fat-loss and metabolism-boosting aids form the basis of this
kit. When you retain mass while expending additional calories or eating less,
you’ll find that ripping up is a piece of cake.
EFFECTIVENESS: Start by eliminating refined carbs and excess
dietary fat. Skip the carbs before bed, cut your carb portions in half at all
other meals and throw
in 4–6 weekly cardio sessions of 35–45 minutes each. Get on the scale
and shoot for a 1–2-pound weekly drop in weight. If you hit the 2-pound
mark yet experience fatigue or a big drop in strength, you’re overdieting
and need to let up by increasing your carbs a bit or doing a little less cardio.
If you feel good, you’re on the right path. If you’re not losing,
don’t kid yourself — you’re overeating.
HOW THE KIT WORKS: Protein is muscle-preserving, and when calories
drop, protein consumption needs to increase. Interestingly, a recent study found
that consuming
a high-protein diet that consisted mainly of whey protein decreased weight significantly
more than a high-protein diet consisting of red meat. Sports-supplement researcher
Jeff Feliciano also recommends branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs): “They
offer a major benefit in maintaining muscle during a diet. The more severe the
diet and training, the more important they become.” The BCAAs — leucine,
isoleucine and valine — are burned as fuel when calories and carbohydrates
plummet, thereby sparing the body’s own muscle tissue.
Feliciano is also keen on capsicum. “It decreases hunger and boosts metabolism,
which means you burn more calories.” Dieters need thyroid support as well.
Says Feliciano: “Guggulsterones help maintain normal thyroid response as
insulin drops, the result of eating fewer carbohydrates. Often, thyroid levels
and metabolism slow down with dieting, and guggulsterones might prevent that.”
Research conducted by Michael Zemel, professor of nutrition and medicine at the
University of Tennessee, reveals that a diet dense in dairy calcium contributes
to fat loss. An alternative is calcium supplements. Like dairy, they help the
body become “metabolically inefficient”, meaning it’s less
successful at storing calories as fat.
USAGE: Bump up your daily protein consumption to 1.5 grams per pound of bodyweight
to prevent the loss of muscle. (That’s 270 grams for a 180-pound bodybuilder.)
Powders are the easiest way to go, plus they’re typically devoid of fat
and carbs. Stack 5 grams of BCAAs before cardio with a capsicum supplement (50
mg taken 2–3 times daily). Add 1,000 milligrams of calcium daily, divided
into three doses taken at mealtimes. Use recommended dose of standardised guggulsterones
three times daily.
3) BEGINNERS KIT
Meal Replacements • Creatine • Glutamine • Flaxseed Oil
CONTENTS: If you’re just getting started, you’ll
find that increasing your calorific intake (from carbs, protein and fat) will
allow you to put on
mass more easily. Easily digested meal-replacement powders are highly nutritious,
typically contain all three macronutrients and can be conveniently prepared and
consumed between meals.
EFFECTIVENESS: Beginners can add 10, 12 or even 15 pounds of
quality size in
just 12–16 weeks, though you’re likely to add several pounds of bodyfat.
Still, that means you’ve added a good 10 pounds of real muscle, and the
added size will allow you to push heavier weights, which will further support
your quest for a bigger, stronger body.
HOW THE KIT WORKS: Three-time Arnold Classic champ Jay Cutler
morphed his teen physique into a mini Hercules in his initial six months of training.
How? Consuming
6–7 meals a day, rotating a solid meal followed by a meal replacement.
Meal replacements are high in protein, vitamins and minerals, though a bit shy
in carbs, so the best bet is to prep them with semi-skimmed milk, juice and fruit
to boost overall calories. Creatine can easily help you pack 5 pounds of mass
onto the beginner’s physique, and glutamine helps in the formation of glycogen,
an important storage form of carbohydrates that helps boost recovery. Since total
calories are extremely important, the beginner can use 2–3 tablespoons
daily of flaxseed oil, the calorie-dense source of omega-3 fatty acids that not
only supports glutamine preservation but fights muscle inflammation.
USAGE: If you can’t eat six medium-sized solid meals a day, try substituting
three meal replacements. Get 3–5 grams of creatine in your post-training
meal and 5 grams of glutamine before and after training. For calorie support
and to keep muscle soreness at a minimum, add 1 tablespoon of flaxseed oil to
your shakes 1–3 times daily.
4) STRENGTH KIT
• Creatine
• ZMA
• Protein Powder
• Phosphatidylserine
• Vitamin C
• Vitamin E
CONTENTS: Strength, roughly defined as the maximum amount of weight you can
lift just one time, shouldn’t be confused with building size, which utilises
a somewhat different training style. Yet they both utilise some of the same
supplements and rely on good nutrition to help you reach your goals.
EFFECTIVENESS: Don’t expect to add 50 pounds to your bench overnight. Do
expect 10% increases in all your lifts across the board in just a few weeks.
The 250-pound bench press ought to go to 275 for reps, the 300 squat to 330.
Remember, training for strength is done with 3–6-rep sets, which provides
the major stimulus for change.
HOW THE KIT WORKS: No other nutrient impacts strength quite like protein; if
you’re off on this, your programme is toast. Creatine increases power.
One potential area of strength nutrition — cortisol control — focuses
on minimising this catabolic hormone. In one study, high doses
of vitamin C taken after training were effective. Other research indicates
very high doses of vitamin E, taken once daily for two weeks, yielded a drop
in creatine
kinase activity, a marker for muscle-fibre injury. In theory, suppressing injury
supports strength. Phosphatidylserine
(PS) and glutamine round out the anti-cortisol bunch. PS can blunt cortisol
release. Keeping cortisol under control supports testosterone levels that,
in turn, significantly
affect strength.
USAGE: You’ll need at least 1.5 grams of protein per pound of bodyweight
daily, so powders
will help here; if you weigh 200 pounds, you’ll need 300-plus grams a day.
Take ZMA as directed on the label an hour before bedtime on an empty stomach.
Take 400 milligrams of PS before training, followed by 1,000 milligrams of vitamin
C, 800 units of vitamin E and 3–5 grams of creatine with a post-training
meal or shake.
5) ENDURANCE KIT
Carb • Glycerol • N-Acetyl Cysteine • Branched-Chain
Amino Acids • American Ginseng
CONTENTS: Endurance is about energy — having plenty of glycogen stores
to prevent fatigue and the immune system from crashing. In a nutshell, that’s
what these supplements will do. They work to build up glycogen stores, hydrate
the body, keep hormone levels that support recovery intact and prevent ups
and downs in energy levels, a potentially undesirable side effect of a carb-rich
diet.
EFFECTIVENESS: Training your muscles to perform at a high
level over a long period requires a far different approach than training for
short bursts of
energy and
power. Fatigue begins to take over and performance can suffer. This kit helps
stave off exhaustion so you experience improved times and recovery, and you’ll
feel better, too.
HOW THE KIT WORKS: Carbs used to be king for the endurance
athlete, but today you have other considerations. Take, for example, the post-training
drink.
Recent research prefers a combination of carbs with protein to ratchet up insulin
levels,
reversing muscle damage associated with exercise. The quasi-fat glycerol helps
hydration, a limiting factor in performance, especially when it’s hot.
Testosterone, which helps recovery, can fall with heavy aerobic work, but BCAAs
taken before exercise can help prevent this decline. N-acetyl cysteine boosts
levels of glutathione, a stress-fighting antioxidant that can assist in recovery.
And while a high-carb diet is still a must, it can deliver unwanted results:
most notably, crashing blood-sugar levels. American ginseng can help keep sugar
levels stable, which equals better energy and less accumulation of bodyfat.
USAGE: Drink 60 ml of glycerol mixed with 1 litre 1–2 hours before exercise.
Immediately before exercise, take 5 grams of BCAAs, and afterward combine 80–100
grams of a carb drink or maltodextrin with 20–25 grams of protein from
whey powder. Consume 600–1,000 milligrams of N-acetyl cysteine after training
and 500 milligrams of standardised ginseng twice daily before any two meals.
M&F
To order Chris Aceto’s books Championship Bodybuilding or Everything
You Need to Know About Fat Loss, visit www.nutramedia.com
This article is for information purposes only. Weider Publishing Ltd does not
accept liability for the effect of reported supplements or products, legal
or illegal. It is the responsibility of the individual to abide by the dosage
allowances
specific to their country of residence. Always consult a doctor before commencing
supplementation or changing dosage.
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