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The Undramatic
Muscle-Building Benefits Of Glutamine
By: Marc David
www.Beginning-Bodybuilding.com
Glutamine: The Basics
Glutamine is 1 of 11 nonessential amino acids. Just
because it's nonessential doesn't mean it's not necessary. Simply
put, the body can produce what it needs. 60% of all free form amino
acids come in the form of glutamine. During times of stress (stress
not defined), glutamine reserves are depleted.
Glutamine: The Benefits
* Boosts immune system functions
* Maintain muscle mass (preservation)
* Prevents muscle breakdown (catabolism)
* Enhances glycogen storage
* Aids recovery from exercise
* Promotes healing
* Increases growth hormone levels
Many studies have already proven that despite all the hype about how
glutamine supplementation might help increase muscle mass, strength
and prevent the dreaded OT (overtraining) syndrome, research
articles that can be found today (2006) that examine glutamine
supplementation benefits on performance, body composition and
protein degradation have shown that it offers no noticeable,
scientifically proven benefit to the weight lifter.
[There goes that popular theory that glutamine helps preserver your
precious muscle after workouts or in general.]
Face it... nobody makes any money proving a supplement doesn't work.
Obviously when I received the original article about glutamine's
super muscle building benefits, I was curious myself. After finding
the research done by David Barr, I was so excited I couldn't wait to
tell you. I'm not going to provide a full reference list - they're
all right at the end of David Barr's article which will be included
here for your reference.
[Thank you, David Barr, for doing all the leg work so I can pass
along your research.]
To summarize some of the key points that David Barr found in his
original research:
* A high protein diet or that of a well-fed bodybuilder who is
following the standards for protein consumption, will be adequately
supplied with all the dietary glutamine they need. About 10% of your
total dietary protein intake is comprised of glutamine (3-10% from
milk proteins; 15% from mean sources). In my case, given my stats
and dietary intake, I'm getting around 29g of glutamine a day from
my diet. More than most supplement companies would ever recommend I
supplement with anyway.
* A lot of theories hold onto the belief that because glutamine
helps with clinical stress, it will help with exercise induced
stress. But keep in mind that exercise has nothing on real clinical
stress. Nitrogen loss in real clinical stress is vastly more
prevalent than the leg workout you just did.
* In a 2001 study by Candow et al, they concluded that 0.9g of
supplemental glutamine/kg/day during resistance training had no
significant effect on muscle performance, body composition or muscle
protein degradation in healthy adults. At my current weight, that is
75g of glutamine a day!
[Re-read this: Candow et al (2001) just blows the presumption that
glutamine is somehow an anti-catabolic agent for the bodybuilder and
going to preserve all that muscle you are working so hard to keep.]
* Most of the studies on endurance athletes have shown little to no
significant benefits in terms of immune system enhancements or
functions.
[Dang it! There goes the other popular belief that glutamine is
going to enhance your immune system and keep you healthy or recover
faster from those stressful workouts.]
"More importantly, there are several studies showing that glutamine
supplementation doesn't alter exercise-induced suppression of the
immune system! The bottom line is that blood glutamine levels,
whether they drop or not following exercise, don’t seem to affect
immunity to any great extent, which precludes the use of glutamine
for this reason." - Hiscock N, Pedersen BK. Exercise-induced
immunodepression- plasma glutamine is not the link. J Appl Physiol
2002 Sep;93(3):813-22
* In regards to glutamine's ability to increase the hydration state
of cells, Dr. John M Berardi, Ph.D. did some preliminary testing and
found that glutamine supplementation has no effect on total body
water, intracellular fluid volumes, or extracellular fluid volumes.
- Dr. John M Berardi, Ph.D., Appetite For Construction,
JohnBerardi.com 2002 Nov 8
* The jury is still out on glutamine enhancing glycogen stores
following resistance exercise. Most bodybuilders have a post-workout
plan of high glycemic carbs anyway which replace any glycogen lost
making further supplement unnecessary.
* In the study by Welbourne (1995) they demonstrated that a small 2g
oral dosage of glutamine is capable of significantly elevating
alkaline reserves as well as growth hormone. But does this affect
the bodybuilder in any measurable way? According to the Cadow et al
(2001) they didn't find any lean body mass gains. It might raise
your growth hormone significantly but it begs the question..."does
it actually DO anything for me when I'm trying to gain muscle?"
[More research is needed in this regard and how glutamine's growth
hormone increase affects your muscle.]
* Finally, in regards to protein synthesis (muscle preservation and
building) the most current research shows no direct correlation that
glutamine increases the rate of protein synthesis at all. Even in
some of the worst cases, it has little measurable effect. There goes
the muscle building theory!
Glutamine
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