Exercising Makes You Less Hungry and Loose Fat
June 4, 2010 | Leave a Comment

There are several benefits of weight training. One major benefit is that it alters chemicals that control your appetite allowing you to have a better chance of succeeding in your low calorie diet. When you’re dieting or inbetween meals, your abdomen discharges a chemical known as Ghrelin.
Ghrelin triggers fat metabolism and it increases the activity of the hypothalamus, causing you to be hungery. This process activates a variety of energy control pathways in the brain in another words, it increase food intake and slows your metabolic rate.
Exercise Changes Hormones that Controls Appetite
When you exercise, your stomach discharges chemicals that stops hunger and encourages ’satisfied’ feeling. These chemicals include: glucagon-like peptide-1, pancreatic polypeptide, oxyntomodulin and peptide.
The Loughborough University in Britain did a study that proved exercise reduces Ghrelin and increases Peptide-W when you’re involved in aerobics and weight training. These hormone changes were greatest during aerobic exercises.
This is why exercise is such an important portion of weight-loss program because it changes the hormones that control the appetite.
Final Thouht
Never leave out exercise when your tring to loose weight.
Source: American Journal of Physiology (Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology), 296: R29-RS5, 2009
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Midnight Snack
December 10, 2009 | 2 Comments

So after hard days work at the gym you go to sleep but you wake from the growling of your tummy. You scour the kitchen for food , after the long journey you find
A. Ready-to-drink(RTD) protein shake
B. Doughnut
C. Low-fat chocolate milk
Which one do you choose?
You thought the RTD shake was the obvious answer , right?
Think again, the better choice is C. Low-fat Chocolate Milk.
The RTD has seriously high fat content. It’s a great post-workout drink but a nightmare for your midnight snack. Needless to say , the doughnut is also way too fatty.
Given the situation the low-fat chocolate milk wins because it contains fast digesting protein (whey) and also slow digesting protein (casein) which will keep feeding your muscles through out the night without the high fat content of the RTD.
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Static or Dynamic Stretches?
December 9, 2009 | 2 Comments

According to a recent study, static stretching, such as ‘stretch and hold’ improved hamstring flexibility than dynamic range of motion exercises (swinging one leg from side-to-side or bouncing) in athletes who are college-aged with and without hamstring injuries.
Athletes who participate in aerobic exercises frequently experience increased flexibility after doing static stretching.
Final Thought
Static is better than dynamic.
Source: BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 10: 37, 2009
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Are You Overtraining!?!
December 7, 2009 | 1 Comment

One of my main concerns in bodybuilding is overtraining. Overtraining is when you train too hard or too frequently for your body to recover from your workouts. There are a lot of symptoms that I use to tell if I am overtraining and they are:
1. Chronic fatigue
2. Overly sore joints and muscles
3. Willingness to go to the gym
4. Lack of appetite
5. Insomnia (lack of sleep)
6. Reoccuring cold or sickness
What is Overtraining?
When you are lifting heavy weights your muscle fibers tear and then while you are resting, through proper nutrition and sleep, they get bigger and stronger (hypertrophy). If you overtrain, your muscle fibers tear and your body does not have enough time to heal the muscles before you go back into the gym and tear the fibers again. This is overtraining!
If you overtrain your muscles, it will not grow in size or strength and can actually get weaker or smaller. Usually the most overtrained muscles are the biceps AKA ‘guns’. Everyone wants a big bicep. They want to intimidate other guys and attract the ladies when they flex. So what do they do? They go in their garage and train the biceps for an hour with 30 sets! Then their biceps don’t grow so they train longer and with more sets and eventually they overtrain and give up lifting weights.
How to fix overtraining?
By deloading, what is deloading? Well pretty simple, either you lower the weights you are doing by 10-30% (thats about 5-15lbs.), lower the number of reps/sets and focus on your form of the exercise or completely stop working out the bodypart[s] that is overtrained for a week or even up to a month(depending on genetics) . Also remember to eat more and take your multivitamins.
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Protein Makes You Less Hungry
November 26, 2009 | Leave a Comment

I know you’ve tried almost every diet in trying to lose that belly fat. Also, the number one cause of diet failure is hunger! You feel like you haven’t eaten anything the whole day but in fact you just ate, sounds familiar?
The part of the brain that controls hunger and the feeling of fullness (satiety) are known as the hypothalamus. This portion of the brain is very sensitive to body temperature, amino acid levels, blood sugar and metabolic hormones.
Documented research from Maastricht University in the Netherlands proved that when people consume high-protein foods or diets originating from 20-30% of energy from protein actually suppressed hunger and promoted the feeling of fullness. Studies conclude that soy protein and casein protein (protein from milk) prevent hunger more effectively than any other type. Protein was considered great for weight maintenance when people were encouraged to eat a lot of high-protein food.
High Dietary Protein is Great for Maintaining Muscle Mass
High dietary protein consumption is really effective when maintaining your muscle mass while encouraging fat loss. However, over indulging high-protein diets may boost blood pressure levels in overweight diabetics or people who suffer from metabolic syndrome.
Tip of the Day
Don’t leave out soy and milk when your trying to lose weight.
(Source: Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care, 11: 747-751, 2008)




