Before you go for the cake, however, I want to apologize that I was somewhat out of it on yesterday's show (click here to listen to the podcast). As a compensation today's Seconds have - as you can see - become pretty "nutritious" at least on a quantitative level ;-)
Looking for the perfect peri-workout meal? What about some cake?
(Kerasioti. 2013) -- It may not really sound like "high performance fuel", but in fact the protein cake a group of Greek scientists fed to their nine physically active and pretty well-conditioned male subjects (age, 28 ± 2 yr; height, 184 ± 3 cm; body fat, 11 ± 2%; body mass index, 23 ± 1 kg/m²) turned out to be much more than just performance fuel after the 2 h of continuous cycling on cycle ergometer at an intensity corresponding to 60-65% of the subjects established VO2max.Training twice a day? No problem with the power cake ;-)
Only four hours later the scientists shooed their subjects onto the bike again for another hour of medium intensity exercise and a 95% VO2max time-trial sprint at the end, "to determine if the cake administration affects performance" (Kerasioti. 2013). Sounds logical, right? What's confusing, though is that Kerasioti et al. don't even mention the performance effects they did or didn't observe in the second bout in the discussion of their results - so I suspect that (a) there were no differences or (b) Kerasioti et al. regard the cytokine response to the second trial as a "performance" marker and stick to that as their "effect on performance" (I don't know about you, bun in my humble opinion the latter would be an even greater flaw than leaving the non-significant information out).
Figure 2: IL-6, IL-10 and CRP response over the whole study period; expressed relative to baseline (Kerasioti. 2013) |
A propos protein: We also talked about the benefits of protein blends with fast and slow proteins.Here is the SuppVersity article about the human study on the casein + whey combination I mentioned. |
Cardio and weights: Your cardiovascular system loves both
(Spence. 2013) -- There is this longstanding and die hard myth that only aerobic training would be good for the heart. With the publication of a recent paper by a group of scientists from the University of Western Australia and the Liverpool John Moores University, you do now finally have something to print out, and tack it to every idiots forehead who still insists that only half-marathon running, but not resistance training could save you from cardiovascular infarction ;-)For their 6-months experiment, the scientists recruited 23 27±5 year-old healthy male subjects who were then randomized to either either endurance (ET, n=10) or resistance training (RT, n=13) in order to evaluate the long-term effects of these training modalities on brachial, femoral and carotid artery diameter and wall thickness (IMT), as well as femoral and brachial flow-mediated (FMD) and glyceryl trinitrate (GTN) mediated dilation. Ha? Well, let's say they wanted to know how the different exercise protocols, the scientists desribe as follows,
would effects the structure and performance of the hearts of their subjects, who completed three 1h training sessions of the respective exercise type per week."[...] the ET intervention consisted of a progressivelyoverloaded programme of walking, jogging and running, inclusive of specified training phases over the 24week period. The focus of the periodized RT programme was Olympic weightlifting with incorporated supplemental exercises (e.g. dead-lift, back squat, front squat, bench press and overhead press) to develop overall strength and technique. Relative intensities for the ET and RT interventions were monitored throughout the sessions, individualized and progressed to ensure that subjects were exercising at prescribed percentages of VO2peak and 1RM, respectively" (Spence. 2013)
For those of you who want to add something to their regimen that boosts the longevity sirtuin, sirt-3 Carl and I have talked about during yesterday's show, here is the HMB + Leucine study I mentioned.
As even resistance training enthusiasts should have expected, the RT group did not see significant improvements in O2Peak (ET yielded +5% increase in this indicator of cardiovascular fitness). On the other hand, the endurance training had no effect on upper body strength, which increased by statistically highly significant +21% in the resistance training group. Both these improvements are yet not really newsworthy and the whole study would not have made it to the SuppVersity Science Round-Up, respectively the Seconds, if it had not been for the high-resolution ultrasound images of the heart, which revealed:
- Resistance training affects the brachial artery, increases brachial artery resting (+8%, P<0.05), peak FMD and GTN-mediated (P<0.01) diameters
- Endurance training affects the femoral artery, increases resting (+3%, P<0.05), peak FMD femoral artery diameters, and improvements in the femoral FMD-to-GTN% ratio
- Both forms of training had similar beneficial effects the carotid artery wall thickness
Figure 3: Changes in body composition relative to pre values (Spence. 2013) |
"I'd like a Levitra(R) enhanced green tea with probiotics..." What?
The last two items from yesterday's list that did not make it into the show are actually not brand new studies. One is a comment from the Journal of Clinical Investigation and the other one is a study that has been around since 2011, already. I picked them up in the course of the week and found them news-worthy, although it is not really sure, a combination of green tea, viagra and rothia bacteria is going to prevent cancer and solve your problems with gluten or whether one or the other or a combination of all is going to kill you ;-) Anyways, here are the details:
In view of the fact that the immunogenic parts of the peptides, that cannot be cleaved by our natural digestive enzymes, it does appear like a too happy coincidence that our microbial subtenants from the oral and upper gastrointestinal tract possess the enzymatic machinery to degrade the harmful gluten peptides for us - don't you think so?
One thing is for sure, the presence of a bacteria that deals with the stuff, we cannot deal with on our own in our oral cavity certainly does support what I said in the context of the "bulimia apparatus" - the digestive process with all it's downstream effects on your metabolism starts in the mouth:"During mastication (chewing) foods are mixed with whole saliva helping to accelerate the break-down by digestive enzymes during the residency time in the oral cavity. Oral microorganisms in the swallowed food bolus may or may not survive and/or continue to exert proteolytic activities during or after gastric passage. Our in vitro data with R. aeria show that its enzymes are not abolished at acidic pH values, and are optimally active under more basic pH conditions. In vivo, this could mean that during gastric passage the enzymes will neither be active nor destroyed, and that enzymatic reactivation would occur upon transfer to the duodenum." (Zamakharchi. 2011)
Aside from the fact that they could make it into the large intestine, previous studies have already confirmed that R. mucilaginosa can even gain a foothold there (Ou. 2009), so that probiotic supplementation with Rothia mucilaginosa could in fact turn out to be a viable treatment / prevention strategy for celiac disease and other gluten related health problems.
- EGCG + PDE-5 = cancer killer (Yang. 2013) -- Cancer is like the Learnean Hydra from ancient Greek mythology (see image on the right). Whenever you cut off one of its heads it'll grow two new ones... well, i must admit the analogy isn't perfect, but it's still useful to understand why the PDE-5 inhibitor vardenafil worked wonders when it was co-administered with the green tea catechin EGCG.
Just like the many Greek warriors who died in their battle with the Hydra before it was finally slain by Heracles, EGCG is well capable of doing major harm to the cancer cells. Just like the snake-like beast the cancer cells have yet found a way to resist the onslaught. Obviously not by growing new heads, though, but rather by over-expressing PDE-5 in order to repress the EGCG increased cGMP activity that would otherwise initiate apoptosis, i.e. the natural self-destruction mechanism of a cell.You really have to wonder why these ancient heroes who had the cunning to kill the Hydra did not even wear a pair of speedos, when they entered into it's watery realms ;-)
So what could be more straight forward than using a PDE-5 inhibitor just like Iolaus, Heracles cousin, used a firebrand to scorch the neck stumps of the Hydra after each decapitation. Clever and effective, don't you think so?
Well, there still is one downside: Just like the story about the Hydra is nothing but a myth, the studies Yang and Wang reference in their commentary in the latest edition of the Journal of Clinical Investigation are only in-vitro studies and whether drinking green tea and popping one of Bayer's Levitra(R) pills after the other, is going to prevent, let alone kill existing cancer, will still have to be elucidated.
References:
- Bounous G, Gold P. The biological activity of undenatured dietary whey proteins: role of glutathione. Clin Invest Med. 1991 Aug;14(4):296-309.
- Kerasioti E, Stagos D, Jamurtas A, Kiskini A, Koutedakis Y, Goutzourelas N, Pournaras S, Tsatsakis AM, Kouretas D. Anti-inflammatory effects of a special carbohydrate-whey protein cake after exhaustive cycling in humans. Food Chem Toxicol. 2013 Jan 26. [epub ahead of print]
- Ou G, Hedberg M, Horstedt P, Baranov V, Forsberg G, et al. Proximal small intestinal microbiota and identification of rod-shaped bacteria associated with childhood celiac disease. Am J Gastroenterol. 2009;104:3058–3067.
- Peng X, Xiong YL, Kong B. Antioxidant activity of peptide fractions from whey protein hydrolysates as measured by electron spin resonance. Food Chemistry. 2009; 113(1):196–201.
- Spence AL, Carter HH, Naylor LH, Green D. A prospective randomised longitudinal study involving 6-months of endurance or resistance exercise on conduit artery adaptation in humans. J Physiol. 2013 Jan 28. [Epub ahead of print]
- Yang CS, Wang H. Cancer therapy combination: green tea and a phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitor? J Clin Invest. 2013 Jan 25:1-3. [Epub ahead of print]
- Zamakhchari M, Wei G, Dewhirst F, Lee J, Schuppan D, Oppenheim FG, Helmerhorst EJ. Identification of Rothia bacteria as gluten-degrading natural colonizers of the upper gastro-intestinal tract. PLoS One. 2011;6(9):e24455.
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