Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Evidence that might help those terrible post cycle blues

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Evidence that might help those terrible post cycle blues

    Evidence that might help those terrible post cycle blues -



    FOOD FOR THOUGHT

    Reason juicer suffer from post cycle depression could
    be due to slight iron and vitman A deficiencies. Did you know that
    steroids strip your iron storage and most people
    dieting are deficient in iron becuase of how your body
    uses it to fight stress. After dieting your iron and
    vitamin A storages are drained resulting in lower
    thyroid out put, muscle weakness, depression, joint
    pains, low lidido. Also if you are finishing contest in the winter time you may be also vulnerable to vitamin D deficiencie from lack of sunligh. I beleive this could be prevented by increasing iron and vitamin A,d post cycle to ellicit
    a faster rebound helping to alleviate the post cycle blues

    Vitamin A:
    The Forgotten Bodybuilding Nutrient

    The dense forest of bodybuilding nutrition contains a
    paradox: the quantity of information available is
    abundant, but the wisdom of traditional diets to
    satisfy the primary concerns of bodybuilders is sparse
    and hard to find. Typical recommendations include very
    low-fat diets rich in protein foods like salmon and
    chicken.

    You will search in vain through mainstream men's
    health magazines to find so much as a mention of the
    importance of vitamin A to bodybuilding. Yet this
    nutrient is essential to muscle-building and may be
    the bodybuilder's most potent weapon. Vitamin A is
    necessary for the utilization of protein and the
    production of testosterone and other growth factors.
    In fact, one human study, discussed below, found the
    administration of vitamin A and iron to have results
    equivalent to the administration of testosterone
    itself. Rather than advocating the consumption of
    vitamin-A rich foods such as liver and natural
    food-based supplements such as cod liver oil,
    mainstream men's health writers are advocating diets
    very high in protein, which deplete vitamin A
    reserves, leaving one to wonder whether the athletes
    who resort to over-the-counter steroid supplements
    might be able to achieve similar results by consuming
    a traditional diet, rich in vitamin A.

    Vitamin A and Testosterone

    Abundant animal research indicates the importance of
    vitamin A to the production of testosterone. Vitamin A
    crosses the blood-testis barrier in its alcohol form
    as retinol, where it is stored in the Sertoli cells
    and converted as needed to its more biologically
    active form, retinoic acid. Experiments with rats show
    that greater concentrations of vitamin A in the testes
    increase basal testosterone secretion, as well as
    transferrin, which is responsible for the transport of
    iron; and a variety of growth factors including
    IGF-binding protein 4 (which transports IGF),
    androgen-binding protein (which transports androgens),
    transforming growth factor-beta (which causes cell
    growth but suppresses cancer) and steroidogenic acute
    regulatory protein (which is responsible for the
    transport of cholesterol into the mitochondria for its
    conversion to steroids). Vitamin A also decreases
    estrogen production in the male testes. Rats that are
    deficient in vitamin A experience decreased
    testosterone until the accessory sex organs atrophy,
    indicating that vitamin A not only aids in, but is
    essential to, testosterone production.1

    One experiment using guinea pigs, which corroborates
    the many experiments done with rats, found a decrease
    in plasma testosterone associated with a deficiency in
    vitamin A.2 A human study comparing the dietary
    intakes of 155 pairs of male twins found a correlation
    between testosterone levels and vitamin A intake.3

    The most compelling study is one that assigned 102
    teenage boys with short stature and delayed puberty
    into four groups: a control, a
    testosterone-supplemented group, a vitamin A- and
    iron-supplemented group, and a group that received
    both testosterone and the nutritional supplementation.
    All treatments were effective in inducing growth and
    puberty, whereas the control group did not gain weight
    or begin puberty in the same period of time. What is
    most amazing is that the degree of growth acceleration
    was similar in the testosterone-treated group and the
    vitamin A-treated group. Pubertal onset occurred in
    9-12 months in the testosterone group, and by 12
    months in the vitamin-A group.4

    This study suggests two things. The first is that the
    growth problems these boys experienced could have been
    avoided if their parents only had known the importance
    of serving a meal with liver on a weekly basis, as
    liver is very rich in both vitamin A and iron. The
    second is that, with equivalent hard work and
    dedication, athletes and body builders may be able to
    achieve similar results from their training by taking
    high-vitamin cod liver oil and eating foods rich in
    vitamin A on a regular basis as others receive from
    the common practice of supplementing with testosterone
    precursors.
    Disclaimer: Steroid use is illegal in a vast number of countries around the world. This is not without reason. Steroids should only be used when prescribed by your doctor and under close supervision. Steroid use is not to be taken lightly and we do not in any way endorse or approve of illegal drug use. The information is provided on the same basis as all the other information on this site, as informational/entertainment value.

    Please take the time to read these threads!

    Fitness Geared Shoutbox rules

    FG member signature rules

    Fitness Geared Forum Rules

    http://www.fitnessgeared.com/forum/f334/

    http://www.fitnessgeared.com/forum/f283/

    https://www.tgbsupplements.com/

  • #2
    Re: Evidence that might help those terrible post cycle blues

    interesting read!

    Comment

    Working...
    X