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04-29-2008, 01:09 AM
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#22 (permalink)
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Blue Belt
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Toronto, Canada |
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great find dude! thanks a lot
__________________
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Payne
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cAZ0W2tnsg0
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04-29-2008, 02:11 AM
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#23 (permalink)
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Belt Purple
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Los Angeles, CA |
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TR14
Timed CHO Dieting tweaked to include Poliquin's Top 10 Carb Intake Rules for Optimal Composition. Energy and macronutrient contents designed with my biosig results taken into consideration.
This is a markedly different approach than what I am use to. The move to TCD coincided with an injury and time off training; hence, the limited CHO intake. My body has adjusted to the diet, which I have seen great results with. I started the insulin protocol later on (i.e. after I felt I had adjusted to the diet).
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Good stuff. I just read his Top 10 Carb Intake Rules for Optimal Composition...I pretty much agree with everything he has down and follow it myself.
I was just wondering what does the Fenuplex , insulinomics and Ultra HCL 3.0 provided in addition to a diet that already promotes low insulin?
Last edited by bubbleboyjones : 04-29-2008 at 02:16 AM.
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04-29-2008, 07:31 PM
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#24 (permalink)
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Blue Belt
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Awesome brother! I will have to watch the last 2 videos later. Sounds good. Its good to see all these interviews with JB.
__________________
Ziltoid The Omniscient:
I am so omniscient that if there were to be two omnisciences’s;
I would be both!
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05-11-2008, 02:24 PM
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#26 (permalink)
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Industrial Athlete
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Quote:
Originally Posted by yer man
great interview
but I have a problem I just got berardi's PN2 last week and yesterday I done the skinfold measurements, now I done it 3 different times but keep coming up with just <6% bf now I'm positive that this is not the case, has anyone else had similar results?
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Accurate skinfold testing needs to be done by trained, experienced professionals; when done properly and consistently, it can be a fairly accurate measure of progress, but there's a TON of room for error.
Your options are:
1) Find a professional, pay a fee to get skinfold testing, and compare to yours.
2) Get a hydrostatic water test done, considered the gold standard. Expensive.
3) Find a facility with a BOD-POD, which uses air displacement plethymography to test BF%.
__________________
Lactate Threshold: The point as work intensity increases where lactic acid levels in the blood rise faster than can be controlled. This is also the “pussy rest-stop.”
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05-11-2008, 11:53 PM
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#28 (permalink)
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Brown Belt
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MikeMartial
\
I believe (and I'm definitely NOT 100% sure) that the idea of localized adipose tissue relating to hormonal imbalance first came from Paul Chek; it's a theory that seems to have a lot of merit, and it's gaining a lot of momentum in the fitness industry right now.
Chek can be about as controversial as Poliquin, but he may just be ahead of the curve. I was surprised to hear Berardi mention this.
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So have you read his work? I have a question, what controls the 'love handles' fat? I have a friend who looks normal all over (flat stomach, no upperback/arm, thigh fat), but she has a lot of fat on her sides. Any idea what hormone controls that?
__________________
Ron Paul for president
http://youtube.com/watch?v=8BB3NrSpRGE
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05-12-2008, 12:13 AM
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#29 (permalink)
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Industrial Athlete
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stylesbjj
So have you read his work? I have a question, what controls the 'love handles' fat? I have a friend who looks normal all over (flat stomach, no upperback/arm, thigh fat), but she has a lot of fat on her sides. Any idea what hormone controls that?
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I've only read very little recently; there's a lot of variables involved, and comparisons of skinfold measurements are just the start. From a short article by James Fitzgerald, the correlation of hormone-to-skinfold is like this: androgen (pec, triceps), insulin (sub scapular, iliac), adrenal (umbilical), GH (calves), and estrogen (thigh). I believe the ratio of the sites when compared to one another correlates to hormone production (or under-production).
I don't think this is a new area of sports science, but some professionals are using it as a tool to tailor training to the individual.
Sorry man, that's all I have. Perhaps others can chime with more info.
__________________
Lactate Threshold: The point as work intensity increases where lactic acid levels in the blood rise faster than can be controlled. This is also the “pussy rest-stop.”
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05-12-2008, 11:45 AM
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#30 (permalink)
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Orange Belt
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Quote:
Originally Posted by stylesbjj
So have you read his work? I have a question, what controls the 'love handles' fat? I have a friend who looks normal all over (flat stomach, no upperback/arm, thigh fat), but she has a lot of fat on her sides. Any idea what hormone controls that?
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Cotisol and stress area. linked directly to cortisol and stress in ones life, whether it be mental or physical.
__________________
www.momentumclimbing.com
www.vediccoach.blogspot.com
www.mmaathletes.blogspot.com
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