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Exercise and Low Carb Diet's Make
Poor Partners
by: Charles Remington
Over the last
twenty five years the most common questioned asked me by frustrated
exercisers, has been what exercise routine will get me the body I
desire? My answer is always the same. They need to start exercising
better judgement and learn that exercise alone will not solve their
body composition problem. I believe the number one reason for
starting an exercise program is weight reduction, even before
fitness and health concerns. Exercise by itself is a poor weight
manager and it increases the need for better nutritional
requirements. I believe I would receive very little disagreement
that a combination of nutrition and exercise is the answer to
improvement in weight loss ( fat loss ), fitness and health risk
concerns. With obesity reaching epidemic rates and the drop out rate
of most health clubs’ remaining high this article intent is to lay
the foundation why exercise and low carbohydrate diet’s are poor
partners.
Over the last three
decades I have seen extreme changes in the macro nutrients (
proteins, carbohydrates and fats ) combinations in our quests for
the ideal body. Everything from high carbohydrate, low fat, high
protein, to the current low carbohydrate craze has bombarded us,
though the failure rates in managing our weight continue to rise.
The problem lies in our bodies ability to adapt to change,
especially extreme change. If your goal is to lose fat you must
provide your muscle enough quality fuel without being over fueled.
This is especially true if your goal to lose fat includes exercise.
The secret is not found in elimination of macro nutrients, but in
management of them. Understanding how to fuel your muscles prior to
exercise sessions and replacing fuel after workouts is critical or
your body will break down muscle for fuel.
Understanding how
our muscles use the calories we eat as fuel for muscle contraction
is the first step in knowing what to do and not to do. A basic
nutritional knowledge tells us that proteins repair and rebuild
cells, carbohydrates energize cells and fats provide hormonal
foundation for cells. When we lack balance in protein, carbohydrates
and fats are bodies adjust and can use all three as a source of fuel
for muscle contraction and cellular energy. Though energy is needed
for all cellular function, the focus of this article is muscle
contraction and body composition. All muscle contraction derives
energy from adenosine triphosphate or ATP. The primary source of ATP
comes from glucose, which is stored in the muscles and liver as
glycogen ( glucose and water ). Muscle contraction during anaerobic
activity ( resistance training ) can use glycogen directly to form
ATP. The process is anaerobic glycolysis, meaning it can use the
glucose as energy with very little oxygen ( 90% glucose, 5% oxygen
and 5% fatty acid ). Our muscles only store enough ATP for short
periods of muscle contraction, when depleted leads to muscle
failure. The rest period between weight training sets allows
additional ATP to be produced. During early stages of aerobic
exercise, ATP is again created primarily from glucose until the
heart and lungs provide enough oxygen to the muscles to allow fatty
acids to be used to create ATP. So there you have it during
resistance training and the beginning stages aerobic training the
primary source of fuel is glucose.
This supports my
claim that low carb diets and exercise make poor partners. To
uncover why, we need to quickly look at the concept behind low carb
diets and how they work. Any diet that provides 100 grams or less of
carbohydrate daily. This article classifies as low carb diet’s. This
will quickly deplete the glycogen stores in the muscle and liver.
This by itself is testimony that our muscle’s primary source of fuel
is glucose. Fatty acids stored in the adipose tissue ( fat cells )
are now released into the blood and processed by the liver and some
are turned into glucose ( gluconegenesis ) and some remain fatty
acids and both provide ATP for muscle contraction. One of the by
products of this process is ketone bodies which can provide energy
to brain and nervous system. The problem gluconegenesis ( non
glucose turned into glucose ) provides fuel to the muscle less
efficiently than glycogenesis ( glucose ). The end result is
increased muscle fatigue, decreased muscle power, which leads to
poor athletic performance.
A recent study
performed at the University of Connecticut showed that exercisers
who switched from a balanced diet ( proteins, carbohydrates and fats
) to a low carb diet experience the following drop’s in athletic
performance. There was a 7 - 9 percent drop in muscle power and 6
percent drop in VO2 max of cardiovascular performance. Another
factor to consider is the recuperation of muscle between workouts is
decreased on low carb diets. So why would someone go on a low carb
diet, especially when exercising? Because the initial weight loss
that comes from the glycogen depletion is believed to be fat loss.
We have become so focused on weight loss, that any weight loss is
seen as good. As identified earlier in this article glycogen is a
mixture of glucose and water and the majority are stored where? You
guessed it, the muscle. A large percentage of the initial weight
loss is coming from muscle loss. I don’t think any exerciser’s
desire is to have smaller muscles as a result of their exercising.
The goal of exercise should be to improve body composition, the
percentage or ratio of muscle to body fat. This can only be
accomplished by losing fat without the loss of muscle tissue.
Maintaining muscle mass is vital to sustainable weight control. The
following steps will protect your muscles as your losing fat, while
reaching your ideal weight and ideal body composition.
FAT LOSS COACH Keys
to losing FAT without losing MUSCLE
1. Cycle fat
burning days with recovery days.
The secret to
losing fat without losing muscle starts with not being too
aggressive or extreme with your reduction of carbohydrates. You need
carbohydrate management, not carbohydrate elimination. Over the last
12 years, with more than 10,000 clients I’ve found by reducing
carbohydrates by 20% of daily needs and within 48 hours replenishing
the glycogen in the muscle by eating 100% of daily carbohydrate
requirements, allows for fat loss, without muscle loss. In essence
you have two fat burning days, then a recovery day. By doing this
you’ll have the best of both worlds. You will experience fat loss
that averages between 1-2 pounds weekly, while muscles are being
well fed. You never drastically deplete the glycogen stores in the
muscle so athletic performance is not affected like on a low carb
diet.
2. Exercise on days
where you are receiving more carbohydrates.
Exercising on days
where muscle are getting more carbohydrates for fuel and taking days
off from exercise when you are being aggressive about fat loss. One
of the most difficult thoughts for exercisers to accept is that most
of the results from exercise come when we are not exercising. They
come after we exercise and in direct response to how the muscles
receive nutrition after exercise.
3. Exercise 1.5 - 2
hours after eating when blood sugar levels and insulin levels are
slowly declining.
As insulin levels
increase in response to a rise in blood sugar after a meal, the
cells are in an anabolic state ( receiving nutrients ). Insulin is
the hormone that feeds are cells. As blood sugar levels drop,
insulin levels drop and the pancreas produces the hormone glucagon
and nutrients stored in the fat cells are released to the blood and
used for energy. The management of this blood sugar rise and drop is
important. If blood sugar levels go to high insulin feeds the muscle
cells and deposits excess into fat cells. If insulin levels go too
low, the muscle cells are being under fed. A slow rise in blood
sugar provides good nutrition to the muscles and a slow drop allows
glucagon to take from the fat cells. Timing your exercise to this
blood sugar decline allows the muscles to receive from the fat cells
more effectively. It is important to never exercise without having
at least one meal left in your day so that muscles can recuperate
from exercise.
Final Thoughts
Long term success
managing weight starts with the right approach. If you are
overweight, the real problem is that you have too much body fat for
how much muscle you possess. A body composition solution is needed,
not just a weight loss diet. Your goal should be to lose fat without
losing muscle or sacrificing your health in the process. To maintain
your results your eating habits must develop life long character.
Low carbohydrate diets provide initial weight loss, but at the high
cost of losingmuscle and reducing metabolism. They are inadequate
sources of fuel to support exercise activity, which is vital in
maintaining good health. The risks to your health long term makes
low carbohydrate diet's poor solutions for life long weight
management.
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