Caffeine and Training: Promoting recovery. By Vic Goyaram

Caffeine and Training: 
Promoting recovery
By Vic Goyaram for Bodybuilding Mauritius
Caffeine is a real deal mental and physical performance booster and is definitely one of the most health friendly compounds gifted to us by mother nature. I like caffeine so much that if I have to choose 5 supplements, caffeine will definitely feature among them. My day starts not with my protein fix or a trip to the toilet but a trip to the kitchen for my coffee. When willing to talk to girls, my favourite ice breaker is "Hey let's go for coffee!".

This article series will deal with key aspects of caffeine consumption and sports and exercise performance. We all know about the effect of caffeine in exercise performance but in this article we will look at a little known benefit of caffeine consumption: muscle recovery. 

Caffeine promotes muscle glycogen resynthesis after glycogen depleting workouts
Glycogen is the storage form of carbohydrate in muscles. This glycogen is the preferred source of energy for muscle contractions in bodybuilding workouts. Therefore, after training it is imperative to kickstart the glycogen replenishment process.  I have received a few questions about why I consume strong coffee with my postworkout meal (Fig. 1) rather than before, because caffeine is supposed to be a preworkout booster. Well, there are quite recent studies that have shown that the consumption of caffeine in addition to carbohydrates post workout leads to a higher rate of glycogen replenishment than with carbohydrate alone. This highlights the potential value of caffeine as a recovery agent in addition to its role as an energy booster.
Fig. 1: My postworkout meal featuring caffeine from coffee
Researchers from RMIT University in Melbourne, Australia, led by Professor John Hawley (who earned his PhD from my research unit in South Africa) carried out investigations on this effect of caffeine. They found that caffeine ingested along with carbohydrates postworkout led to 66% more muscle glycogen than carbohydrate alone. The researchers suggested that this caffeine effect may be due to a greater rate of glucose absorption by muscle cells. Therefore, they set out to analyse the effect of caffeine on the intracellular processes that are normally responsible for glucose uptake under exercise.  

Two key molecules that are involved in this process are the enzymes CaMKII and AMPK. These become active as a result of muscle contraction during exercise. Their activation triggers processes in cells that bring about the movement of glucose transporters (GLUT4) to the surface of muscle cells for glucose uptake (See Fig. 2). A greater rate of glucose uptake may lead to increased glycogen resynthesis because glucose uptake is a limiting process in glycogen resynthesis. Interestingly, the researchers found that caffeine + carbs intake after exercise leads to a greater level of CaMKII activation than what is normally experienced by carbs only. This may indicate  a greater rate of GLUT4 activation, glucose uptake and glycogen resynthesis.
Fig. 2: Caffeine may bring about increased glycogen resynthesis via an increase in glucose uptake by muscles through GLUT4 transporters
Although not investigated by the above study, the activation of the CaMKII (and AMPK) enzymes also increases the synthesis of GLUT4 so that there are more of these transporters available to take up glucose. The link between CaMKII activation and increased GLUT4 levels has been extensively reviewed in an article that I co-authored with my professor in the American Journal of Physiology, Endocrinology and Metabolism last year (Ojuka EO, Goyaram V and Smith JA, 2012). My research group from the University of Cape Town has also extensively studied caffeine in glucose uptake at the molecular level, under the leadership of Professor Edward Ojuka.

Practical application and important considerations
  • Caffeine dosage and intake protocols: The Australian study above has used a high amount of caffeine (8 mg per kg of bodyweight) but smaller doses are also under investigation as well as the effect of taking caffeine before, during and after training (vs. caffeine taken only after). I speculate that smaller doses and spreading the caffeine intake around workouts may also work.
  • Other considerations: proceed with caution if you have any known sensitivity to caffeine and stimulant products, high blood pressure or any cardiovascular complications. It is best to check with your medical doctor before taking caffeine-containing products including pre-workouts. Some people may experience sleeplessness and feel jittery after a caffeine megadose while others may not experience any such things.  That is why researchers are investigating lower doses of caffeine. The potential side effects of caffeine will be discussed in future articles.
I hope you found the article helpful. Do not hesitate to share links of our articles on Facebook and join us for daily discussions on bodybuilding on the Bodybuilding Mauritius Facebook Page. More articles on caffeine and bodybuilding will follow.

 
Caffeine from both coffee and supplements
gets my SEAL OF APPROVAL
References:

Pedersen DJ, Lessard SJ, Coffey VG, Churchley EG, Wootton AM, Ng T, Watt MJ, Hawley JA. High rates of muscle glycogen resynthesis after exhaustive exercise when carbohydrate is coingested with caffeine. J Appl Physiol 105: 7–13, 2008


Ojuka EO, Goyaram V, Smith JA. The role of CaMKII in regulating GLUT4 expression in skeletal muscle. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 303: E322–E331, 2012.

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©,2013, Veeraj Goyaram, Bodybuilding Mauritius. Any reprinting in any type of media is prohibited.

Disclaimer:
The Content on this site is intended to be used for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as medical advice or a diagnosis of any health or fitness problem, condition or disease; or a recommendation for a specific test, doctor, care provider, procedure, treatment plan, product, or course of action. BODYBUILDING MAURITIUS is not a medical or healthcare provider and your use of this site does not create a doctor / patient relationship. We disclaim all responsibility for the professional qualifications and licensing of, and services provided by, any physician or other health providers posting on or otherwise referred to on this Site and/or any Third Party Site. Never disregard the medical advice of your physician or health professional, or delay in seeking such advice, because of something you read on this Site. We offer this Site AS IS and without any warranties.  Correspondence: vicgoyaram@gmail.com
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Tip of the Day: Do not neglect your adductors. By Vic Goyaram

Tip of the Day
Do not neglect your adductors
 By Vic Goyaram
For Bodybuilding Mauritius
A great contributor of Tom Platz's awesome leg development is his inner legs. The latter are called the adductors, consisting of a group of muscles whose main role is to bring the legs together towards the body (adduction). Strong adductors are a must, not only for aesthetic reasons but also for maintaining a healthy and stable knee. If your knees twist inwards when you perform squats then it is very likely that your adductors are weaker compared to your quadriceps. The following are the tricks that will help you work the adductors quite well:

1. The Wide Stance
By squatting and leg pressing with a wide stance you engage the adductors to a greater degree. I have covered these points on my articles on squats and leg press. 


2. The Adductor Machine
This machine is not only for ladies looking for toned legs but also for hardcore bodybuilders.  It is a great adductor exercise.  Use very strict form and make sure the legs are warmed up before performing machine adductions because the movement involves quite a bit of stretch. If your gym does not have this machine then you can stick to wide stance squats and exercise #3 below.
Avoid making eye contact when performing adductions
3. Jefferson's squats
Also known as the 'Straddle lift', this exercise resembles both a deadlift and a squat. The glutes and the hams get a lot of work as well. Jefferson's are a favourite of Kai Greene and Toney Freeman, the only two pro bodybuilders regularly seen performing this exercise according to sources.
Click to enlarge for text
Here is a video of Kai Greene performing Jefferson's

4. Sumo stance deadlifts
Performing the deadlift with the sumo stance has its advantages, one of them is that it engages the adductors to a much greater degree than in conventional regular stance deadlifts.  

I hope you enjoyed the tips! Do not hesitate to share links of this article on your facebook!!

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©,2013, Veeraj Goyaram, Bodybuilding Mauritius. Any reprinting in any type of media is prohibited.

Disclaimer:

The Content on this site is intended to be used for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as medical advice or a diagnosis of any health or fitness problem, condition or disease; or a recommendation for a specific test, doctor, care provider, procedure, treatment plan, product, or course of action. BODYBUILDING MAURITIUS is not a medical or healthcare provider and your use of this site does not create a doctor / patient relationship. We disclaim all responsibility for the professional qualifications and licensing of, and services provided by, any physician or other health providers posting on or otherwise referred to on this Site and/or any Third Party Site. Never disregard the medical advice of your physician or health professional, or delay in seeking such advice, because of something you read on this Site. We offer this Site AS IS and without any warranties.  Correspondence: vicgoyaram@gmail.com
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Bodybuilding Mauritius Quick tips: The Clean and Press. By Vic Goyaram

BODYBUILDING MAURITIUS QUICK TIPS:
THE CLEAN AND PRESS
by Vic Veeraj Goyaram for Bodybuilding Mauritius
Newly signed Team Bodybuilding Mauritius athlete from South Africa
Duane Gilbert, a big believer in clean and press. Check his shoulders
You can work your entire body with the "fabulous four", consisting of squats, deadlifts, bench presses and the last one which risks being forgotten: the clean and press. The clean and press is a bodybuilding adaptation of the olympic weightlifting move called the Clean and Jerk. 

Ways of performing the clean and press

1. The "Bodybuilding style"
The video below of Justin Harris depicts this very well. Shoulder width grip with minimal involvement of the legs and no jerking. Justin relies less on weightlifting technique and momentum to get the bar up and recruits more muscle to do the job. This is what we bodybuilders are after. There is no bending of the legs and the bar travels only at arm's length up to mid thigh. 

2. The hang clean and press (pictured)
Bending the torso a bit, allowing the bar to reach near the knees. 

The whole is greater than the sum of the parts
The barbell clean and press works many muscles at once, making it a great metabolic activator besides a great movement to thicken the body. The clean and press works many muscles in unison and the end result of working with such compounds is more impressive than individually developing each muscle with isolation exercises. 
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©,2013, Veeraj Goyaram, Bodybuilding Mauritius. Any reprinting in any type of media is prohibited.
Disclaimer: The Content on this site is intended to be used for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as medical advice or a diagnosis of any health or fitness problem, condition or disease; or a recommendation for a specific test, doctor, care provider, procedure, treatment plan, product, or course of action. BODYBUILDING MAURITIUS is not a medical or healthcare provider and your use of this site does not create a doctor / patient relationship. We disclaim all responsibility for the professional qualifications and licensing of, and services provided by, any physician or other health providers posting on or otherwise referred to on this Site and/or any Third Party Site. Never disregard the medical advice of your physician or health professional, or delay in seeking such advice, because of something you read on this Site. We offer this Site AS IS and without any warranties.  Correspondence: vicgoyaram@gmail.com
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The Bodybuilding Mauritius Posters. By Vic Goyaram

The Bodybuilding Mauritius Posters
Prepared by Vic Goyaram
We hope you will enjoy these posters and take lessons from them. They deal with all topics of bodybuilding: training, nutrition, motivation, philosophy. From the world's best bodybuilders. Pardon my poster design skills but most important is that the message reaches you! 

                    Conditioning and shape win shows over mass

Hit the compounds for bigger arms

                       Nutritional bro-science by Dr. Layne Norton

Laterals and wide grip uprights better than presses

Forever lean v/s forever bulk

Attitude, Optimism and hard work

                             Who said bodybuilders are dumb?

Laziness: one of the causes of small calves

                             Some of the finest triceps exercises

Low carb, high protein and high fat for definition




Does heating reduce the protein content of powders? By Vic Goyaram

CAN YOU HEAT PROTEIN DRINKS OR USE POWDERS IN HOT DRINKS AND RECIPES?

By Vic Goyaram for Bodybuilding Mauritius
People are often advised to not subject protein drinks to direct heat or use protein powder in hot recipes because heat "denatures the protein" and "decreases the protein content" and thus making the protein supplement less effective. This is not 100% correct. Protein molecules in nature have a certain structure, meaning they exist in different shapes and are folded in a certain way. This is what we mean by structure and this structure allows the protein to assume its functions, be it to act as an enzyme or as a transporter molecule etc. Heating does denature proteins which means that the structure of the protein changes.

When we as a bodybuilder eat a protein food or supplement our main aim is to get amino acids from it. Amino acids are the breakdown products of the protein and are re-used by the body for various functions, one being muscle protein synthesis. When we cook an egg we are denaturing the protein that is why it coagulates but we don't mind this, do we? Protein supplements (whey, casein etc) are no different.

In the case of whey protein, the heat may be altering some of the biological properties of the whey protein by denaturation (e.g bioactive peptides present in whey protein) but it is in no way reducing the protein content. The body will still get the amino acids unless you completely burn the protein or the food comes out as "charcoal" from the oven, microwave or stove in which case the amino acids themselves may be degraded.

I have explained the issue of protein denaturation in quite some detail in the article on raw v/s cooked eggs. Click here to read. That being said, let me share with you one recipe to beat the boredom out of consuming protein powders. 

PROTEIN FUDGE QUICK RECIPE
Add two scoops of protein powder (40g powder) to a mug, add enough milk to dissolve the protein into a thick paste. Then add 1 large spoon of peanut butter. Stir into a paste. Then microwave the whole thing for about two minutes. Keep and eye it to avoid burning it or turn it into rubber. It will become like a cake. Yes, protein powder becomes food! I am eagerly waiting payday so that I can start making this recipe.

Approximate nutritional content:
Protein 37g
Carbs 5g
Fats 10g

_____________________________________________________________________________
©,2013, Veeraj Goyaram, Bodybuilding Mauritius. Any reprinting in any type of media is prohibited.
Disclaimer: The Content on this site is intended to be used for educational and entertainment purposes only. It is not intended to be and should not be interpreted as medical advice or a diagnosis of any health or fitness problem, condition or disease; or a recommendation for a specific test, doctor, care provider, procedure, treatment plan, product, or course of action. BODYBUILDING MAURITIUS is not a medical or healthcare provider and your use of this site does not create a doctor / patient relationship. We disclaim all responsibility for the professional qualifications and licensing of, and services provided by, any physician or other health providers posting on or otherwise referred to on this Site and/or any Third Party Site. Never disregard the medical advice of your physician or health professional, or delay in seeking such advice, because of something you read on this Site. We offer this Site AS IS and without any warranties.  Correspondence: vicgoyaram@gmail.com
________________________________________________________________________________

OVERTRAINING

The fear of overtraining is pervasive across the online landscape.  Everyone has a rule or protocol in place to ensure that someone doesn’t overtrain.  If you train more than 3 days a week, you’re overtraining.  If you do more than 50 reps in a workout, you’re overtraining.  It’s all the same, with the “HIT Jedis” being the butt of many “fear of overtraining” jokes.

And if I may go off on a rant for a second, seriously, f**k Arthur Jones.  Nothing to do with his system (I can talk to that later), but by all accounts, the man was a prick.


Even his trainees can't stand to look at him
Anyway, it’s all silliness, at least in the capacity we experience it.  The people that fear overtraining are people who have never actually worked hard.  These are the people that never ran 2 a day practices, or did “up downs” in a 100 degree wrestling room to sweat out weight for a match, or went through a basic training environment, or any sort of real “push to the limits” moment in their life.  The people who managed to avoid these experience have no idea just what sort of limits the human body has and how far it can be pushed before it actually breaks.

Let me explain it with a metaphor.  Worrying about overtraining is like worrying about catching the clap from banging Megan Fox.  You need to focus on actually making progress before you concern yourself with the consequences of succeeding.


Editor's note: Is Megan Fox even relevant anymore? Who do the kids talk about these days?

If you keep pushing yourself to the point where you actually overtrain, you will at least be making amazing progress up until that point.  If you always shy away from hard work to avoid this overtraining boogieman, you’re simply not going to grow.  The average person avoids strain, you must seek it and forge your body with iron and spite to be able to stand out.

Overtraining isn’t going to happen in a workout.  It’s not going to happen in a few workouts.  It’s going to take a consistent, day in and day out for months on end hardcore balls to the wall leave no prisoners kind of effort to really start to reach overtraining, and up until that point, you will be building something terrifying inside of you.  Your work capacity will be insane and you will have the fanatical thousand yard stare of someone that has lost their sense of self into something much bigger.

Now, I am not claiming that it’s impossible to push yourself too hard in a workout.  We’ve heard the stories of rhabdomyolysis resulting from hardcore crossfit workouts, but you also have to keep in mind that those stories involve someone starting out on the program in a group setting where they were pushed against their will by others.  If you are training solo or with a workout partner, your odds of this are rapidly diminished, and I of course say that with no scientific backing whatsoever.

And I am saying all this as someone that has actually experienced overtraining.  I know the symptoms well enough in myself after having it happen twice.  I’ll get sore in muscles that never get sore (calves, hamstrings and abs are big warnings for me) and my desire to train will cease to exist, to the point where I will dread lifting.  However, in reaching this point in my training, I had blown past previous stagnant PRs and transformed myself physically, which, no matter how much I needed to rest or change my gameplan at that point, could not be taken away.  The overreaching I did to get there put me in a much better position than if I had gone home early a bunch of times to avoid the overtraining boogieman.


I heard he only shows up if you say "20 rep squats" 3 times in a mirror

“There is no such thing as overtraining, just undereating” was a great quote by the barbarian brothers.  Of course, they were roided to the gills, but it’s still something to keep in mind.  Within yourself lies the capacity to push much harder than you thought was possible.  Don’t listen to the naysayers and conventions that hold people back from reaching their goals.  Experiment, push, and find out what is possible.

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