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| posted by Hyde |
| I was told to run after my workout to burn more fat because of you have so much glycosene when you wake up. But what if you don't have time to workout in in the morning and only have time at night. So putting daily routines into consideration like work and school and such... is there still alot of glycosene in the body towards the night? I just want to know so I know to workout before I go running tonight. thanks. |
| posted by Trance92071 |
| Ok, well I got this from the book Newbies Research guide. As it is helping me and has helped me. Here it is (it's worth reading) It is a common thought and concern that carbohydrates are fattening. They are not. Too much fat is fattening. In one teaspoon of fat you will find 36 calories. In one teaspoon of carbohydrates you will find 16 calories. The amount that is converted into fat is very limited because you burn carbs for energy during any activity. For even one gram of carbohydrate to reach adipose storage, it must first not be able to be burned as energy. If there is an overabundance of carbs and some aren’t used for energy, they are stored as glycogen. If by some chance, the glycogen stores are full and that carbohydrate can’t be used as energy, there is a chance that that it may be stored as bodyfat. One’s metabolism will affect the amount of carbs left over for fat storage by causing more or less to be burned. With a decent metabolism and healthy diet, carbohydrates should not be allocated to fat storage. Fats are readily stored as bodyfat. There are four calories in one gram of carbohydrate; four calories in one gram of protein; nine calories in one gram of fat; and seven calories in one gram of alcohol (hence the beer gut). What you burn and when: There are several sources of energy. When a person is doing low-level exercise, such as walking, or maybe performing various tasks at work (if work is not just sitting in a chair), he burns primarily fats for energy. When doing light to moderate exercise, jogging and brisk walking for instance, stored fat provides 10% - 30% of your body’s fuel. When you exercise hard, sprinting, running, swimming, you rely mostly on the glycogen stores in your muscles for the energy. Remember, these are percentages, not amounts. You will burn way more fat if you are active than if you were sitting in a chair. There is a difference in how the trained and untrained body stores glycogen (glycogen in animals is the same as starch in plants, its one way an animal stores energy). There is a biochemical change that occurs when a person trains consistently for prolonged periods of time. Well-trained muscles will acquire the ability to store more glycogen than untrained muscles, about 20% - 50% more. For example, an untrained muscle has about 13 grams of glycogen per 100 grams of muscle. A trained muscle stores about 35 grams of glycogen per 100 grams of muscle. When carbo-loaded (eating a super heavy load of carbs for a day or so –usually in prep for some event such as a powerlifting meet), a muscle has about 35 - 40 grams of glycogen which is considerably more than normal of 13 grams. When you have a depleted supply or store of glycogen, you will “crash” and not be able to complete a workout or to train at your best. Depleted glycogen stores can affect someone mentally and physically due to the fact that the brain uses glycogen too yet it doesn’t have any glycogen stores. You naturally have about 1,800 calories stored in your body at any given moment as glycogen ready to be converted for energy (not including calories from fat) in the following breakdown: Muscle glycogen, 1,400 calories - liver glycogen, 320 calories - and Blood glucose, 80 calories. The body doesn’t use the actual glycogen for energy. Glycogen is broken down into glucose. Glucose is the actual useful form of energy; glycogen is just a storage molecule; it’s glucose in storage. Glycogen is a polysaccharide consisting of glucose molecules (glucose-glucose-glucose…). These natural stores determine how long you can enjoy your workout before getting fatigued. Liver glycogen is transported into your blood stream, maintaining blood sugar (glucose) levels needed for brain food. Foods must be consumed close enough to your workout to supply sugar (energy) to your brain, since unlike the muscles, the brain does not store its own energy. So what is the importance of eating complex carbs if they are just converted to sugar? Why not just eat sugar? Well, there is one problem w/ sugar consumption. It’s quick energy. In other words it’s carbohydrates that are already broken down into their simplest form. Therefore they must be either used then or stored. Your body will try to use them before it will store them. That’s why you get a “sugar rush.” And that’s also why little kids don’t get candy at night; they’ll never go to bed. But not long after a “sugar rush,” there will be fatigue due to the role that insulin plays in sugar degradation. Starting to see how it works? Glycogen in the liver will release sugar during a workout. The presence of these sugars causes the pancreas to release insulin. Therefore, glycogen is “stored energy.” Glycogen, a complex carb, provides energy after being broken down into sugars without the pancreas having to release a lot of insulin. There is no sugar rush with the release of glycogen because it is gradual (complex carbohydrates break down slower). It’s ok to have some sugar during a workout. This is because the work of insulin is virtually a slow process. Another reason one doesn’t want too much sugar in the body during the workout is osmosis. Water moves from places of lower concentration of solute to a place of higher concentration of solute. In other words, high concentrations of sugars in your digestive system can pull needed water out of the muscles where the oxygen molecule pulls down a hydrogen electron down the electron transport chain to make ATP (discussed in detail later) and relocates it into the digestive tract. |
| posted by Hyde |
| So... how does this answer my question? I'm an idiot. |
| posted by Trance92071 |
| hahaha basicley it's saying that if you have a lot of trained muscle your glycogen levels will be high and last longer therefor you can do a more intense workout for longer periods of time. If you are eating right then I don't see why there would be any reason why it would not be good for you to run at night rather than the morning. Just make sure you are not wearing your muscles down to much during the day. if you don't then your glycogen stores will should be full and ready to work and burn fat |
| posted by Hyde |
| I thought that's what it meant. but I wasn't sure. That's not what I meant though. Somebody on here said that if you're using the glycogen when you run you won't burn as much fat. I was asking to see if I should workout before I ran at night so I could burn miore fat. |
| posted by Trance92071 |
| read this part it will answer your question to what you want to do: What you burn and when: There are several sources of energy. When a person is doing low-level exercise, such as walking, or maybe performing various tasks at work (if work is not just sitting in a chair), he burns primarily fats for energy. When doing light to moderate exercise, jogging and brisk walking for instance, stored fat provides 10% - 30% of your body’s fuel. When you exercise hard, sprinting, running, swimming, you rely mostly on the glycogen stores in your muscles for the energy. Remember, these are percentages, not amounts. You will burn way more fat if you are active than if you were sitting in a chair. |
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