How Many Carbs Do You Need Post-Exercise?
In
contrast, infusion of a low dose of insulin directly into the brachial
artery has been reported to achieve the maximal effect on protein
breakdown.5,6 It’s interesting
that diabetics or patients with insulin resistance have increased muscle
protein breakdown and increased muscle atrophy, due to the defects in
insulin signaling. The increased breakdown of muscle in diabetics
is also due to elevated ubiquitin-proteasome pathway (UPP) levels,
which create a catabolic scenario.1
Carbohydrate supplements reduce muscle protein breakdown, but have no effect on muscle protein synthesis.2,3 In fact, even though carbohydrate ingestion reduces muscle tissue breakdown, the net balance of protein kinetics still remains negative.4 Most bodybuilders recommend incorporating periodic
high-glycemic meals, which spike insulin— especially post-workout. This
is not only effective for maintaining an anabolic state, but the
insulin spike that results also shuts down the UPP pathway and reduces
muscle tissue breakdown.
A study published in BMC Molecular Biology
reports that increasing amino acids, or leucine alone, acts with
insulin to downregulate muscle protein breakdown and reduce UPP. Thus,
the use of l-leucine while dieting seems to be effective for reducing
muscle tissue breakdown by reducing UPP. In addition to hormonal
stimulators of UPP, resistance exercise also increases UPP, which is a
normal adaptation to exercise. For years, bodybuilders have been told to
consume a high-glycemic index shake with some added protein/BCAAs after
exercise, but a new study will make you ask, do you need a ton of carbs, post-exercise?
A study published in the American Journal of Physiology
examined both low and high carbohydrate ingestion before resistance
exercise to determine how many carbs is enough. The researchers used equivalent
amounts of essential amino acids (~20 grams) but differing amounts of
carbohydrates (low carbohydrates = 30 grams; high carbohydrates = 90
grams). The male research subjects ingested nutrients one hour after an
acute bout of leg-resistance exercise.
30-Gram Rule
The
results of the study were quite interesting. Of course, the group that
consumed 90 grams of carbohydrates had larger increases in blood glucose
levels, but the results in protein synthesis were similar. The
researchers concluded that the findings were similar to previous
studies, which found that muscle protein synthesis is not enhanced when
carbohydrates exceed 30 grams. The researchers did not detect any
significant differences in gene expression for markers of muscle
catabolism following larger dosages of carbohydrates.7
They concluded that the changes in muscle protein synthesis were due to
changes in the essential amino acids, while only a moderate dose of
carbohydrates (~30 grams) is needed. Furthermore, these changes occur
irrespective of the carbohydrate dose or circulating insulin levels.
So
when bodybuilders are using post-workout carbohydrate beverages such as
Vitargo or maltodextrins, 30 grams are all you need— and taking more
than that does not seem to provide additional benefit in terms of muscle
protein breakdown.
References:
1.
Wang X, Hu Z, Hu J, Du J, Mitch WE. Insulin resistance accelerates
muscle protein degradation: Activation of the ubiquitin-proteasome
pathway by defects in muscle cell signaling. Endocrinology, 2006 Sep;147(9):4160-8.
2. Roy
BD, Tarnopolsky MA, MacDougall JD, Fowles J, Yarasheski KE. Effect of
glucose supplement timing on protein metabolism after resistance
training. J Appl Physiol, 1997 Jun;82(6):1882-8.
3. Roy
BD, Fowles JR, Hill R, Tarnopolsky MA. Macronutrient intake and whole
body protein metabolism following resistance exercise. Med Sci Sports Exerc, 2000 Aug;32(8):1412-8.
4.
Borsheim E, Cree MG, Tipton KD, Elliott TA, Aarsland A, Wolfe RR.
Effect of carbohydrate intake on net muscle protein synthesis during
recovery from resistance exercise. J Appl Physiol, 2004 Feb;96(2):674-8.
5.
Louard RJ, Fryburg DA, Gelfand RA, Barrett EJ: Insulin sensitivity of
protein and glucose metabolism in human forearm skeletal muscle. J Clin Invest, 90:2348-2354, 1992.
6. Meek SE, Persson M, Ford GC, Nair KS. Differential regulation of amino acid exchange and protein dynamics across splanchnic and skeletal muscle beds by insulin in healthy human subjects. Diabetes, 1998 Dec;47(12):1824-35.
No comments:
Post a Comment