Liver Protection while on Steroids

All Anabolic Steroids put stress on the liver. So does alcohol, prescription drugs, and asprin. This is the reasoning behind bodybuilding veterans not recommending “oral only cycles”. Oral steroids are methylated in order to bypass breakdown by the liver. As a result they are highly toxic to the liver.

The reason why injectable steroids are recommended by mainstream bodybuilders to be the base of a steroid cycle is because it is much easier on the liver. Injectable steroids are not methylated and they slowly release over days putting much less stress on the liver.

If you want an equivalent anabolic effect of a oral steroid as you get with injectables you will be putting your liver under a lot more stress. The liver is a very resilient organ and can even grow back if it’s severed or damaged. However, there is no reason to put your liver under undue stress by using mainly orals.

Recommended liver supplements on cycle

Milk thistle is a general liver health supplement. NAC seems to be even more important in helping against liver detoxification and healing. Keep in mind that liver supplements (in theory) should reduce the potency of your steroids. Many bodybuilders for this reason do not take them during their cycle. I think it’s a good idea to use low doses of NAC and milk thistle even while on cycle. Frequent steroid users should use liver health supplements everyday year around.

Artificial Sweeteners are they safe?

Artificial sweeteners is a common ingredient for bodybuilder diets. They are found in many protein powders and other supplements. Bodybuilders might even add it to their foods low in carbohydrates.

Personally my feeling is any artificial Sweetener should not be used in large doses in the diet if you can avoid it. Almost all of them have been found to have questionable or conflicting very serious health effects when done for animal studies.

So therefore we won’t be recommending or even reviewing any of them as everyone seems to be questionable based on research. They are all unsafe, or at least suspected of not being safe. Most artificial sweeteners seem to have possible cancer link and/or other very dangerous health effects. My motto is, better safe then sorry. The government’s corporate interests often do not line up with the best interest of the people.

If you plan on adding sweeteners to your diet you should do some thorough research on any(all) scientific studies before adding it to your diet.

There really is no better sweetener then mother nature herself.

Bigorexia

Bigorexia, what is it? Bigorexia is the opposite of anorexia. It is a psychological condition coined by some psychologist because the person can never feel as strong and muscular as he wishes. Just great, now they have a psychological term covering all of us bodybuilders. As if we didn’t have enough negative connotations around us as it is. Well, not quite. I believe it only occurs in a portion of bodybuilders who have a psychological pre-disposition to it.

Bigorexia is really the extreme lifestyle of the bodybuilder. It’s where you will do steroids, and/or sacrifice vacation or family time, in order to go to the gym to lift weights or because you are freaked out about missing a meal to fuel your muscles. It is not to be confused with someone preparing for a bodybuilding contest. It is someone who feels this way year around and becomes obsessed in their goal for large muscles.

I am certainly no psychologist, but I think it occurs mainly in bodybuilders who have low self esteem/depression or other psychological problems such as obsessive compulsive disorder or addictive personalities. I must admit I suffered bigorexia. I think it’s hard to ever get “over it” completely, just like smoking or drugs.

Diabetes and Bodybuilding

There are two types of Diabetes those who are born with type I, it’s purely genetic. In type II you become diabetic after many
years of diet abuse with eating the wrong carbohydrates and/or being overweight. Type II runs in families so some are more
susceptible. In other words just because you don’t have diabetes now doesn’t mean you should be careful with your carbs and your fat levels so you don’t become diabetic in the future. It is important you check your family history background for diabetes to know if you are susceptible to it. Diabetes is a silent killer like high blood pressure. You may be borderline diabetic and not even know it.

Bodybuilding is important in reducing this risk because increased muscle mass from resistance training increases the need for glycogen uptake in the muscles. Therefore they will need to use the extra glucose for reserves in energy in resistance training. Diabetes also increases your insulin sensitivity. Diabetes is insulin tolerance and therefore your body doesn’t react to massive amounts of insulin and store it in the glycogen like it should. By excercising you are counteracting the effect of diabetes and the insulin receptors to work at the “normal”level.

A bodybuilder with diabetes or risk of developing diabetes should focus most of his daily carbs around slow digesting carbs. Some examples of alternative carbs to use are: whole wheat pasta, oatmeal, oat bran, whole grain bread, etc

Diabetes like high blood pressure are two conditions you can manipulate with diet and excercise in your favor. Don’t let it beat you!

Skinny People Unhealthy?

According to this news that may be the case.

LONDON - If it really is what’s on the inside that counts, then a lot of thin people might be in trouble. Some doctors now think that the internal fat surrounding vital organs like the heart, liver or pancreas — invisible to the naked eye — could be as dangerous as the more obvious external fat that bulges underneath the skin.

“Being thin doesn’t automatically mean you’re not fat,” said Dr. Jimmy Bell, a professor of molecular imaging at Imperial College, London. Since 1994, Bell and his team have scanned nearly 800 people with MRI machines to create “fat maps” showing where people store fat.

According to the data, people who maintain their weight through diet rather than exercise are likely to have major deposits of internal fat, even if they are otherwise slim. “The whole concept of being fat needs to be redefined,” said Bell, whose research is funded by Britain’s Medical Research Council.

Without a clear warning signal — like a rounder middle — doctors worry that thin people may be lulled into falsely assuming that because they’re not overweight, they’re healthy.

“Just because someone is lean doesn’t make them immune to diabetes or other risk factors for heart disease,” said Dr. Louis Teichholz, chief of cardiology at Hackensack Hospital in New Jersey, who was not involved in Bell’s research.

Even people with normal Body Mass Index scores — a standard obesity measure that divides your weight by the square of your height — can have surprising levels of fat deposits inside.

Of the women scanned by Bell and his colleagues, as many as 45 percent of those with normal BMI scores (20 to 25) actually had excessive levels of internal fat. Among men, the percentage was nearly 60 percent.

Relating the news to what Bell calls “TOFIs” — people who are “thin outside, fat inside” — is rarely uneventful. “The thinner people are, the bigger the surprise,” he said, adding the researchers even found TOFIs among people who are professional models.

According to Bell, people who are fat on the inside are essentially on the threshold of being obese. They eat too many fatty, sugary foods — and exercise too little to work it off — but they are not eating enough to actually be fat. Scientists believe we naturally accumulate fat around the belly first, but at some point, the body may start storing it elsewhere.

Still, most experts believe that being of normal weight is an indicator of good health, and that BMI is a reliable measurement.

“BMI won’t give you the exact indication of where fat is, but it’s a useful clinical tool,” said Dr. Toni Steer, a nutritionist at Britain’s Medical Research Council.

Doctors are unsure about the exact dangers of internal fat, but some suspect it contributes to the risk of heart disease and diabetes. They theorize that internal fat disrupts the body’s communication systems. The fat enveloping internal organs might be sending the body mistaken chemical signals to store fat inside organs like the liver or pancreas. This could ultimately lead to insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, or heart disease.

Experts have long known that fat, active people can be healthier than their skinny, inactive counterparts. “Normal-weight persons who are sedentary and unfit are at much higher risk for mortality than obese persons who are active and fit,” said Dr. Steven Blair, an obesity expert at the University of South Carolina.

For example, despite their ripples of fat, super-sized Sumo wrestlers probably have a better metabolic profile than some of their slim, sedentary spectators, Bell said. That’s because the wrestlers’ fat is primarily stored under the skin, not streaking throughout their vital organs and muscles.

The good news is that internal fat can be easily burned off through exercise or even by improving your diet. “Even if you don’t see it on your bathroom scale, caloric restriction and physical exercise have an aggressive effect on visceral fat,” said Dr. Bob Ross, an obesity expert at Queen’s University in Canada.

Because many factors contribute to heart disease, Teichholz says it’s difficult to determine the precise danger of internal fat — though it certainly doesn’t help.

“Obesity is a risk factor, but it’s lower down on the totem pole of risk factors,” he said, explaining that whether or not people smoke, their family histories and blood pressure and cholesterol rates are more important determinants than both external and internal fat.

When it comes to being fit, experts say there is no short-cut. “If you just want to look thin, then maybe dieting is enough,” Bell said. “But if you want to actually be healthy, then exercise has to be an important component of your lifestyle.”

Source

People need to realize there is two types of fat. The subcutaneous fat that is below the skin which isn’t as bad as visceral fat which is mainly around the organs. It also gives the big potbelly you seen in alcoholics. The potbelly in alcoholics is caused by an increase in cortisol (the same hormone during stress and excercise). That is why people who store large amounts of fat in their belly are more susceptible to health side effects then people who store fat evenly around their body. So just because you are skinny doesn’t mean you are healthy.

This is another good reason for bodybuilding for woman and men because diet isn’t enough. You have to excercise too to keep the visceral fat down even when your thin. Weight lifting is a fun and excellent way to excercise.


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