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Originally Posted by Frank.S
What about the effects on CNS of HIIT? Should we just ignore them? "Lets burn out our cns to get 5% more fat loss!"
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And if you work out every day, 7 days a week, you're going to take a hit (no pun intended...well, maybe just a little) on your recovery too...what's your point? When did i advocate multiple HIIT sessions/week? Further, when did I say that ss
wasn't a good option??? I wrote that
fasted ss wasn't worth it (read my original post again). You're grasping at straws and building a strawman here, Frank. And I'd agree with Eric: if you're working out as intense as a competitive powerlifter, I wouldn't suggest any HIIT either...but that's a sport-specific model, and a training style that most of us aren't doing. Further more, we're talking muscle hypertrophy, which is related, but not the same specifically, as strength training...Exercise intensity on the workout design is a fundemental aspect of programming...and I'll add to the quote: show me a powerlifter that performs fasted cardio, and I'll add a nice potato and a side-salad to that T-Bone steak for you.
Perhaps you'll enjoy reading this:
http://www.mindandmuscle.net/mindand...1&artID=999274
http://www.mindandmuscle.net/mindand...5&artID=999309
"It should hopefully be evident by this point that since AMPk is activated in an intensity-dependent manner in response to increased cellular creatine: phosphocreatine (PCr) and AMP:ATP ratios, in terms of effectively achieving significant and systemic AMPk activation, sprinting really is king in spades [
Author’s note: for those who have recently suffered an injury and/or regularly experience joint and ligament problems, both high-intensity swimming and iron or clean cardio can be utilized as serviceable HII alternates to replace sprint work in your split that will achieve similar effects on cellular energy state signaling](5,). It’s also the adaptive nature of AMPk-activity that makes it such a potent phenotype-augmenting force. While it generally remains inactive as a substrate-source shifter during periods of high intensity exercise due to the spikes and dips in cellular Ph that accompany rapid PCr/ATP turnover, during the post-workout period this little kinase immediately begins to pull every enzymatic trick up its sleeve. It does this in an attempt to simultaneously replenish, bolster, AND protect your muscle cells so that they’ll be better able to respond to future situations that require similarly high degrees of rapid fuel and substrate turnover (7). "
In other words, AMPK signals the body to store glycogen, which is muscle sparing, while promoting lipolysis in the post-workout EPOC period. Fasted ss? The opposite occurs.
Finally, you talk of vomiting like it's some sort of "badge of honor" here, indicating "intense" work...where originally you wrote that it wasn't good to vomit. You're contridicting yourself. Do you understand the physiological causes of vomiting in the first place?
If you believe that fasted ss helped you lose weight, then that's great. But trying to argue with innacurate physiology isn't going to work.