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(Fausto @ Mar. 27 2007,13:53)</div><div id="QUOTEHEAD">QUOTE</div><div id="QUOTE">Sure thing Faz, but for some of those things you need to be "plugged in" to know, unless one of these "nerds" could give us a calculation.
Some of them sound really useful, and some we can actually find if we look hard enough, anyway..."pickles" for now...just shut up and lift...and aim for better eating, lifting, goal setting and mindset.
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they are saying that by taking there test they can calculate all these..........
What can you determine from the test information?
1 How many calories your body needs to maintain weight
2 Which macronutrient (fat or carbohydrates) it prefers at rest
3 Which foods you should eat at which times
4 Your ideal heartbeat range for burning fat
5 Where you begin to burn muscle and go catabolic in a fasted state
6 How many calories you are actually burning at any given heart rate intensity
7 Your body's own macronutrient split of carbohydrate and fat when exercising
8 Predict your daily EE
9 Create and sustain anabolic (and avoid lengthy catabolic) environments
10 Avoid fasting mode, allow the body to burn fat again, and avoid thyroid down-regulation
How does this impact the bodybuilder and fitness enthusiast?
The implications of this data are massive. It's a powerful weapon for the trainer to employ to tackle their goals whether it be muscle gain, fat loss, or both. If you know where your body burns fat during cardio you can ultimately make any cardio work you do non-catabolic (preserve muscle mass) and simply strip off fat, leaving vital nutrients for repair and recovery. Users of the data have literally avoided years of wasted training and suboptimal diets in the pursuit of physical perfection.
For pre-competition bodybuilders this information is vital. For those who are not willing to sacrifice hard-earned muscle mass, again it's simply invaluable. Even for those looking to get into their wedding dress, or look good on holiday with only limited time to prepare, it's a breakthrough in exercise science.
It's important to know where the body burns fat and where it burns carbohydrates. When carbohydrate is not present, the body is forced to use protein and fat to fuel exercise - which leads to weight loss but muscle loss, too. Data personally collected by the authors shows 65% of maximum heart rate is highly catabolic for many people contrary to what we are told by the media. The fat burning zone is not a myth, but it is individual, and it's simply a case of finding your own zone and designing your cardiovascular work around this. The data will also give an accurate figure of calories expelled in the session allowing the trainer to again formulate EE and modify bodyweight as a result. This figure again is inaccurately calculated by many pieces of gym equipment. Find the real number and work in your fat burning zone, not the muscle burning zone.
What can you do with RMR? Resting metabolic rate allows the trainer to establish how many calories they can cut and bulk on. Data again personally collected has shown two male subjects of similar weight, age and body composition to have a 700 calorie difference in their RMR. This figure is huge and can be the difference between someone adding muscle on a 3000 calorie diet and one losing weight on what was designed to be a bulking diet. Know your RMR, know where to start when creating a calorie deficit (to cut), or surplus (to bulk). When people shout “I'm not gaining, I'm eating loads” we now have one more source of information as to why this is the case.
Below are the RMR test results from two men of the same age using gas analysis:
Subject 1
Height: 180 cm
Weight: 103kg
Body fat: 15%
RMR: 1800 calories
Subject 2
Height: 180 cm
Weight: 84kg
Body fat: 17%
RMR 2500 calories
In these real world examples, the heavier, more muscular man requires fewer calories than the lighter, but proportionally fatter man. The usual assumption is that the facts would be the other way round.
This emphasises how person-specific metabolic rate is, and how simple measurements applied to an online 'metabolic rate calculator' are highly inaccurate when trying to establish RMR. Gas analysis is a requirement if gains are your goal. Without it, you're purely flying by guesswork. (700 calories equates to 1lb/0.4kg alteration in weight every 5 days).