пятница, 6 мая 2011 г.

All About Post-Workout Nutrition

All About Post-Workout Nutrition

What you eat is important. However, when you eat it can be just as critical.


What is post-workout nutrition?


Post-workout nutrition is an intriguing topic and rightfully so. The basic idea is threefold:


  • The body deals with nutrients differently at different times, depending on activity.
  • What you consume before, during, and especially after your workout is important.
  • By consuming particular nutrients after your workouts (aka post-workout nutrition), you improve your body composition, performance, and overall recovery.

Numerous studies have examined everything from the composition of the carbohydrate in post-workout drinks to exact amino acid combinations. Studies continue to reveal effective post-workout nutrition strategies for athletes and recreational exercisers of all types.


Generally, post-workout nutrition has three specific purposes:


  • Replenish glycogen
  • Decrease protein breakdown
  • Increase protein synthesis

In other words, athletes/exercisers want to:


  • replenish their energy stores
  • increase muscle size and/or muscle quality
  • repair any damage caused by the workout

In doing so, they want to increase performance, improve their appearance, and enable their bodies to remain injury-free.


Proposed benefits of good post-workout nutrition include:


  • Improved recovery
  • Less muscle soreness
  • Increased ability to build muscle
  • Improved immune function
  • Improved bone mass
  • Improved ability to utilize body fat

These benefits seem to work for everyone, regardless of gender or age.


Why are workout and post-workout nutrition so important?


When we work out intensely, we damage tissues at the microlevel, and we use fuel.


This is what ultimately makes us stronger, leaner, fitter, and more muscular, but in the short term it requires repair.


Repair and rebuilding occurs through the breakdown of old, damaged proteins (aka protein breakdown) and the construction of new ones (aka protein synthesis) — a process known collectively as protein turnover.


Muscle protein synthesis is increased slightly (or unchanged) after resistance workouts, while protein breakdown increases dramatically. We’re doing a lot more breaking-down than building-up.


The relationship between these two parameters (rate of muscle protein synthesis and muscle protein breakdown) represents the metabolic basis for muscle growth.


Muscle hypertrophy occurs when a positive protein balance can be established during recovery — in other words, when we make sure we have enough raw materials available for protein synthesis to occur, so that it doesn’t lag behind protein breakdown.


This is especially difficult with endurance athletes as protein synthesis drops and protein breakdown goes up.


Protein breakdown and synthesis
Protein breakdown and synthesis

Studies show that this trend can be reversed – specifically, protein synthesis is stimulated and protein breakdown is suppressed when you consume the right type of nutrients after exercise.


Protein is not the only concern, however. During exercise sessions, stored carbohydrates can be substantially depleted.


Thus, during the postworkout period, we require protein and carbohydrates.


The raw materials we give our body through the consumption of food/supplements in the workout and post-workout periods are critical to creating the metabolic environment we desire.


What you should know about workout nutrition


Availability


Availability strongly influences the amino acid/glucose delivery and transport.


In other words, in order for our bodies to use raw materials to rebuild and recover, those raw materials have to be available. And if they’re available, then our body is more likely to use them. Simply having the materials around can signal to our body that it’s time to rebuild.


We improve availability in two ways.


  • Increased blood flow to skeletal muscle during and after exercise means that more nutrients are floating around more quickly.
  • Providing an amino acid and glucose dense blood supply during and after exercise means that the rate of protein synthesis goes up.

Thus, we improve availability by having more blood circulating more rapidly, and by having more nutrients in that blood.


The “window of opportunity”


Some refer to this workout and post-workout phenomenon as “the window of opportunity”.


During this window, your muscles are primed to accept nutrients that can stimulate muscle repair, muscle growth, and muscle strength.


This window opens immediately after your workout and starts to close pretty quickly. Research suggests that while protein synthesis persists for at least 48 hours after exercise, it’s most important to get postworkout nutrition immediately, and within 2 hours afterwards.


If you feed your body properly while this window is open, you’ll get the benefits.


If you don’t provide adequate post exercise nutrition fast enough — even if you delay by only a couple of hours — you decrease muscle glycogen storage and protein synthesis.


As soon as you drop that last dumbbell, you should be consuming some postworkout nutrition.


What to eat


As we’ve mentioned, post-workout nutrition requires two things:


  • Protein to aid in protein synthesis
  • Carbohydrates to help replace muscle glycogen (and to enhance the role of insulin in transporting nutrients into cells)

You could certainly eat a whole food meal that meets these requirements after exercise.


However, whole food meals aren’t always practical.


  • Some people aren’t hungry immediately after exercise.
  • Whole food digests slowly, and we want nutrients to be available quickly.
  • A whole food meal that requires refrigeration might be less practical.

On the other hand, consuming a liquid form of nutrition that contains rapidly digesting carbohydrates (e.g., maltodextrin, dextrose, glucose, etc) and proteins (e.g., protein hydrolysates or isolates:


  • might accelerate recovery by utilizing insulin for nutrient transport into cells;
  • can result in rapid digestion and absorption; and
  • is often better tolerated during and after workouts.

insulin_after_training
Combining protein and carbohydrates might aid recovery

Data indicate that it may only take about 20 grams of protein after a workout to maximally stimulate muscle protein synthesis.


Which workouts qualify?


Save your workout drink for weight training, interval, and endurance training lasting 45 minutes or longer.


Casual exercise like walking the dog, moving cobblestones for grandpa, or riding your bike to the arcade doesn’t require a recovery drink.


When performing energy expenditure work to burn energy or lose fat, a recovery drink is not necessary. If you’re prioritizing fat loss, performance and recovery from these sessions are not as important as creating an energy deficit.


Still, if overall energy intake is low from food intake, and lots of time is being spent performing energy expenditure work, consuming a branched chain amino acid (BCAA) supplement might be helpful.


Summary and recommendations


With intense workouts/training, start by ingesting 30 grams of carbohydrate and 15 grams of protein (in 500 ml water) per hour of workout time.


You can sip this during the workout or consume it immediately after.


You can either make your own post-workout drink or find a pre-formulated drink that contains rapidly digesting carbohydrates (e.g., maltodextrin, dextrose, glucose, etc) and proteins (e.g., protein hydrolysates or isolates).


Once your workout is complete, have a whole food meal within an hour or two.


If priority #1 is to lose body fat, use only BCAAs as a workout drink. About 5 to 15 grams per hour of training (200 pounds or more = closer to 15 grams, 200 pounds or less = closer to 5 grams).


If you’re leaner but still want to lose fat, choose a smaller dose (like 1/2 dose) of the protein + carb combination, or opt for BCAAs.


For extra credit


The combination of carbohydrate and amino acids during/after exercise creates a stimulatory effect of growth hormone and testosterone that doesn’t happen during the rest of the day. In other words, if you just drink a carb + protein drink while sitting on the couch, it won’t have the same effect.


When choosing carbohydrates, keep in mind that glucose is absorbed faster than fructose, and solutions high in fructose have been linked to gastrointestinal distress, greater fatigue, and higher cortisol levels.


It may be helpful to add creatine to your workout nutrition.


Essential amino acids may be more important than nonessential for promoting positive nitrogen balance after workouts.


Eat, move, and live… better.


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Let us help you make sense of it all with this free special report.


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References


Original article and pictures take assets.precisionnutrition.com site

четверг, 28 апреля 2011 г.

Active Isolated Stretching Exercises

Active Isolated Stretching Exercises

Active Isolated Stretching (AIS) is a technique that lengthens and strengthens muscle tissue. Our muscles have two major functions: to contract or relax. The idea of AIS is to hold a stretch for one to two seconds, relax, and then repeat the movement for 10 to 15 times for one to two sets. When the stretch is done right, you should be able to increase your range of motion with each additional set.


The benefits of incorporating AIS into your routine are numerous: increased isolated flexibility, realignment of the body, reduced chance of injury and better awareness of your body. Try the following routine four to five times a week after your runs.


Get down on all fours and keep your head in a neutral position. Extend one leg back and focus on contracting your glutes and hamstring.

Get into a fetal position; rest your right side on the floor. Keep the left hip and knee directly over the right hip and knee.

Sit with your knees bent and your feet out in front of you. Pull your chin down into your chest.

Pull your nose towards your belly button, which will allow your spine to flex forward and down. You can pull down on your ankles with your hands to give you some assistance. Hold each stretch for two seconds. Complete one to two sets of eight to 12 reps.

Start in a standing position, making sure to hold your core tight.

Pull your arms up and back, squeezing your shoulder blades together. Try pulling your arms back in different angles to stretch the entire chest. Hold each stretch for two seconds. Complete one to two sets of eight to 12 reps.

Original article and pictures take www.active.com site

среда, 13 апреля 2011 г.

Abductors Stretching - Sitting Side Leg Lifts

Abductors Stretching - Sitting Side Leg Lifts

Simple post workout stretch. Working on flexibility is a full time job. This exercise helps stretch your abductors, and buttock muscles.


1. Sit in an L shape with your legs straight and fully stretched out toes pointing towards the sky.


2. Keeping one leg on the floor and back neutral throughout the movement. Lift your leg slowly into the air until maximum tension is reached. Hold this tension for 12-15 seconds. Then relax and complete same exercise with alternate leg.


Original article and pictures take cdn.shopify.com site

четверг, 7 апреля 2011 г.

A Yoga Sequence To Recover After A Workout

A Yoga Sequence To Recover After A Workout

Studies show that the best time for athletes to do static stretching of the lower body is after the completion of training sessions. Recent research explains that static stretches before sports endeavors weaken the very muscles needed to power workouts. Basketball, soccer, surfing, running, cycling, tennis and football for instance, all require strong fast leg work to generate the forces necessary for peak performance.


Power originates at the core, which then passes the energy to the limbs for explosive results. The heavy work occurs when our leg muscles kick in by contracting to activate the force needed to move. Static stretching tires muscles and makes them less able to store energy and snap to action. It can also make muscles more prone to injury. The general consensus today is to stretch after training unless we do light dynamic stretching, which warms the muscles up.


It is, however, extremely important to stretch the lower body after sports. A post-athletic tuneup that opens the hamstrings, knees, calves, Achilles, and ankles increases flexibility, which can enhance performance and prevent injury.


Below are a few simple yoga postures for athletes to do after training.


Original article and pictures take www.mindbodygreen.com site

вторник, 29 марта 2011 г.

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Original article and pictures take www.99suspensiontraining.com site

вторник, 22 марта 2011 г.

9 Yoga Poses That Will Make Any Workout More Effective

9 Yoga Poses That Will Make Any Workout More Effective
yoga poses
ron cadiz

We can get new cars, new houses, and new winter coats, but we get only one body. Put in too many miles on the treadmill and you start feeling like a vintage Mustang that needs new parts.


"The cumulative stress of working out takes a toll on you, and your body needs to recover," says Nicholas A. DiNubile, MD, author of Framework: Your 7-Step Program for Healthy Muscles, Bones, and Joints. He recommends using yoga to speed the recovery process. Asanas and deep breathing send oxygen to hard-to-reach places in your tendons, joints, and disks buried in your back. Plus, yoga poses fine-tune your agility and balance while working your entire body.


When you apply the yoga poses that follow, yoga becomes the perfect complement to machine-assisted workouts to give you a better gym workout. Before your high-intensity activity of choice, do the prep yoga poses to prime your muscles. Afterward, ease into another asana, the post yoga pose; you'll be able to capitalize on the pliability of your muscles to stretch and restore your whole body. Both the warm-up and the cool-down take 5 minutes or less. Now go get loose. (No time to hit the gym? Then you need the fast, supereffective workouts in our new Fit in 10 DVD!)


Your Machine: The Treadmill

While the surface of a treadmill is more forgiving than the rugged outdoors, it's not stress-free. "Treadmills encourage you to overstride," which can lock up your pelvic muscles, among other problems, says Douglas Wisoff, a physical therapist in Boulder, CO. These poses balance you out no matter where you put in your miles.


Prep Pose: Lying Big Toe


comp-562281-lyingbigtoe-ron_cadiz.jpg


lying big toe pose
ron cadiz

To release hip, lower-back, and hamstring tension before you walk or run, lie on your back, then bring your right leg up at a 90-degree angle. If you can't grab the big toe without taking your shoulders off the floor, place a strap or towel around your right foot. Make sure your left leg is grounded into the floor, then gently pull the raised right leg closer to the body.


If your back starts to round, keep the left knee bent with the sole of the foot on the floor. Internally rotate your leg slightly by rolling your right thigh inward to stretch your iliotibial band and the outside of your thigh. Again, make sure your left leg is grounded into the floor, then gently pull the right leg closer to your body. Concentrate on reaching the leg up as well as pulling it in toward your head and chest. Hold for 5 to 10 breaths. Repeat with the other leg.


Post Pose: Half Hero Variation


comp-582282-halfhero-ron_cadiz.jpg


half hero variation
ron cadiz

This is an intense quad and psoas stretch that will ward off thigh cramps. How intense? Sandra Safadirazieli, instructor at Piedmont Yoga Studio in Oakland, CA, calls it "ouch-asana." So go easy; don't overdo it. Start on all fours facing away from a wall, with your feet touching it. Bend your left knee back to the base of the wall so that your shin is against the wall and your toes point to the ceiling. From here, begin to lift your torso and feel a stretch in your left quad.


To deepen it, take your right foot and step into a lunge, making sure your right knee is stacked over the ankle. "This will access your quad even more," Safadirazieli says. To deepen further, draw your tailbone toward the floor and place your hands on your front thigh or straighten your arms overhead. If you're tight, you can place your hands on blocks on either side of your front foot. Hold for 5 to 10 full breaths in each phase (if you do both the leg up the wall and the lunge), and then slowly draw your left leg back down before switching sides.


Your Machine: The Elliptical

Low impact and high cardio make the elliptical machine your body's favorite cross-trainer. But even this bone density–enhancing workout has pitfalls. Gripping the handrails, for example, can cause muscle tension throughout the body, especially the shoulders. And the elliptical running motion can yank on tight lower-back muscles. (Plus, you could be making things worse if you're doing any of these 10 Mistakes You're Making On The Elliptical.)


The first pose here creates greater range of motion in the hip joints, which reduces that pull. The second releases fascia and muscle tissue, so you don't take tension home with you.


Prep Pose: Reclined Twist Variation


comp-562283-reclinedtwist-ron_cadiz.jpg


reclined twist variation
ron cadiz

This variation will stretch your gluteal muscles and your spine, releasing compression and tightness. Lying on your back, cross your right thigh over your left—"like you're sitting on a cocktail stool," Safadirazieli says—and let your knees roll to the right side of your body. Bend your arms at the elbows, forearms parallel to one another. Hold for 5 to 10 breaths before crossing the other leg over and repeating on the other side.


Post Pose: Steady Cross-Legged Stretch


comp-562294-steadycrossleggedstretch-ron_cadiz.jpg


steady cross legged stretch
ron cadiz

Sit cross-legged and breathe in and out three times. Place your hands on the floor in front of you and lift your hips. Then drop them back several inches behind where they just were, creating a larger diamond between groin, knees, and ankles and flattening out the front of the pelvis. On the inhale walk your hands out in front of you only as far as you can go without rounding your back. The spine should be absolutely straight as you begin to feel a warmth zip down your back in the lowest reaches of the seat and tail.


After a few comfortable breaths, try walking your hands out farther to stretch your shoulders and upper back, staying for several breaths. Walk yourself back and then switch sides by placing the opposite ankle in front. This is guaranteed to open up your hips, lower back, and shoulders. Your legs are also freer in the joints, and on the elliptical that all means low-back relief.


Your Machine: Weights

Whether your flavor is machine-assisted or dumbbells, lifting weights builds muscle but often neglects some important, less showy areas. Yoga, on the other hand, lengthens and tones muscles in a symmetrical way. Lift and yoga-cize your muscles, and you have comprehensive coverage.


Prep Pose: Dolphin


comp-562295-dolphin1-ron_cadiz.jpg


dolphin pose
ron cadiz

Before weight lifting you want to get muscles ready to generate explosive spurts of power by increasing blood flow. This posture gets all the leg muscles firing and "brings circulation into your shoulder girdle," according to Barbara Ruzansky, director of West Hartford Yoga in Connecticut. Sit up on your knees, and bring elbows to the floor, directly under shoulders. To gauge the correct distance, wrap your hands around the opposite biceps, then bring hands down so forearms and hands are firmly on the floor. Bring arms forward so forearms are now parallel to the sides of the mat, hands pointing straight ahead. Take a few breaths.


comp-562296-camel-ron_cadiz.jpg


dolphin pose
ron cadiz

On the exhale straighten your legs so your body is suspended in the air, anchored only by toes and forearms. Push down through the forearms, lift the rib cage from shoulders, and press your sit bones back, heels toward floor. Keep your head off the floor as you hold for 5 breaths before coming down. Repeat for as many reps as you do in a weight lifting session.


Post Pose: Cow's Head


comp-562297-cowshead-ron_cadiz.jpg


cow's head pose
ron cadiz

This will open your hips and shoulders. Sit and cross one leg over the other, heels close to buttocks. Stretch your left arm out to the side. Arch your chest forward, then lower your arm, wrapping your left hand up behind and between your shoulder blades, fingers pointing up, palm facing out. Raise your right arm straight overhead, then bend your elbow so your right fingers come to your left fingers. Clasp your palms together if you can. Draw your right elbow up toward the ceiling and your left shoulder blade downward. Slightly tuck your chin but keep your chest lifted and your spine, neck, and head as straight as possible. Hold for 5 to 7 breaths before switching sides.


Your Machine: The Bike

Our prep pose will release your upper back, shoulders, and neck to prepare for a ride, says Rudy Peirce, a yoga teacher and trainer at the Kripalu Center in Lenox, MA. Another imperative for cyclists, says Bruce Mitchell, a Denver yoga instructor who teaches at Mindful Cycling's camps, is "to offset rounding of the lower back, which leads to pain and tightness from head to toe."


The Camel, our post pose here, will strengthen your back while improving your posture to counter that riding position. It will also bring down your heart rate and give your legs their stability back so you can walk, not wobble, out of the spin studio.


Prep Pose: Standing Yoga Mudra


comp-562298-standingyogamudra-ron_cadiz.jpg


standing yoga mudra pose
ron cadiz

Stand tall with your feet hip-width apart. Interlace your hands down behind your back. Inhale deeply, and as you exhale begin to fold forward from your hips, bringing your hands and arms up and as far forward as you comfortably can. At first your knees can be bent, but as the body loosens, your legs can straighten and your hands may press farther forward. Shake your head a few times back and forth to make sure you are completely releasing any tension. Hold for 3 to 5 breaths or longer. To release, inhale as you lift the torso and lower the hands behind your back. Exhale and release the hands.


Post Pose: Camel


comp-562299-camelreal-ron_cadiz.jpg


camel pose
ron cadiz

Kneel so your torso is perpendicular to the floor. Bring your hands to your sacrum, fingers pointed down. Your little fingers should be as close together as possible. "The key here is to keep your quads and hips pushed forward," Mitchell says. Drop your head back. In the beginner version, just continue to reach your quads and hips forward. When that is comfortable, try dropping your hands back down to your heels. If you can't quite reach them, go up on the balls of your feet. Hold for 5 to 15 breaths.


Original article and pictures take www.prevention.com site

пятница, 11 марта 2011 г.

9 Post-Workout Mistakes You Don't Realize You're Making — Because Yes, Cool Down Is Actually Important

9 Post-Workout Mistakes You Don't Realize You're Making — Because Yes, Cool Down Is Actually Important

The universal truth is that we all want to get the most out of our workouts. If we've made the effort to drag ourselves to a gym/yoga studio/spin class and managed to survive, you can bet that we want to make sure we've done everything we can, and that we want to avoid pre and post-workout mistakes to get the best results. We all know how important it is to eat before exercising, wear the appropriate clothing and hydrate to the point of excess, but it turns out there are certain post-workout behaviors that are important, too.


After an intense gym session, all you probably want to do (at least, all I ever want to do) is leave immediately, grab a chipotle burrito and melt into your couch for the remainder of the evening with a bottle of wine and your Netflix queue. Unfortunately, there are a few things you need to get done so that your workout was worth all of the effort you put into it before that dream can become a reality.


Here are some post workout mistakes we're all guilty of making, probably without realizing it (including me, who happens to be writing this wearing the same outfit I wore to a bootcamp class at 6 a.m.) and how to fix them.


1. Forgetting To Cool Down



If you’re anything like me, as soon as you hit the X-mile mark (whatever goal you’ve set for yourself on a given day) on the treadmill, all you want is to hop off and be done. But in order to make the most of your workout, it’s uber-important to take those five extra minutes to cool down. Cooling down reduces your heart rate, stabilizes your blood circulation and reduces muscle soreness.


2. Skipping Your Stretches



There’s always that awkward moment at the end of a workout class when people start to sneak out before the stretching starts, and it turns out they are making the biggest workout mistake of all. Stretching after a workout, it turns out, is actually just as important as the workout itself. It helps reduce aching in your muscles and increases flexibility, which will make your next gym session quite a bit easier.


3. Waiting Too Long To Eat



After a tough workout, you're bound to be starving. Your metabolism is revved up for two full hours after a workout, so make sure you eat something within this time frame. Wait at least 15 minutes so your body can cool down, but then treat your body to a refuel your after it’s lost so many calories.


4. Eating The Wrong Things



There are certain things you should absolutely never eat after a workout, all of which are filled with either sugar or salt. Choose something that has both protein and carbs (peanut butter toast is a great option) to fill yourself up the right way.


5. Not Hydrating Enough After You’re Done



Water is so, so important for your body before, during and after your workout. It also happens to be good for your skin and body (we all need to just accept that it’s the miracle liquid and stop talking about it) so you’re really doing yourself a favor by drinking it often. You need to stay hydrated in order to replace the liquids your body lost through sweat, and water is the best way to do it. Sports drinks are OK too, but unnecessary unless you’re, say, running a marathon or competing in an iron man (which I certainly I am not). Skip out on energy drinks (though coffee, weirdly, is another recommended post-workout drink) and make sure you drink at least 34 ounces of whatever you decide to hydrate with (water water water!!).


6. Touching Your Sweaty Face/Not Washing Your Face Immediately



Sweat breeds bacteria (lovely, isn’t it?) which can clog your pores and cause breakouts. Touching your sweaty face is a major no-no because it spreads the bacteria around, and can transfer new oil and bacteria to your skin from your hands (Germ party in your pores! Holla!). Wash your face immediately after exercising to get rid of the dirt and keep your skin safe.


7. Not Tracking Your Progress



After all, how will you know what a strong gym-goddess you’re turning into if you don’t keep track of your workouts? It’s important to make note of how you’re doing (how many miles you’re running, how much you’re lifting, how your body is changing) so that you can continuously set new, effective exercise goals.


8. Staying In Your Sweaty Clothes Too Long



And I don’t just mean for the sake of the people who have to be around you all day. Wearing your workout clothes for too long after you leave the gym can cause rashes and bacterial infections, including yeast and staff infections (yikes!). If you really don’t have time to change, make sure your exercise attire is made out of synthetic fabrics that have been designed to keep you cool and dry.


9. Skipping Your Shower



This should be an obvious one (because let’s be honest, if you’re working out as hard as you should be you probably stink afterward) but showering after you exercise is an absolute must. Leaving sweaty bacteria on your skin can cause breakouts (hello, bacne.) and cause gross infections. Leave yourself enough time at the gym to rinse off (with soap, please), or at the very least rub yourself down with some baby wipes.


Original article and pictures take cdn.bustle.com site