Do
Aerobics Make You Lose Muscle?
By
Tom Venuto
Yes, it's true. It's a scientifically proven fact that muscle proteins
are broken down and used for energy during aerobic exercise. But don't
worry, you are constantly breaking down and re building muscle tissue
anyway. This process is called "protein turnover."
Your body is constantly alternating back and forth between anabolic (building)
and catabolic (breaking down) cycles. That's just a normal part of life.
Your goal is simply to tip the scales slightly in favor of increasing
the anabolic side and reducing the catabolic side just enough so you stay
on the anabolic side and you gain or at least maintain muscle.
This fact of human physiology has often been taken out of context and
used to scare people into not doing cardiovascular exercise for fear of
losing muscle. When you fast overnight as you sleep, you lose muscle too,
but that doesn't mean you should stop sleeping!
Sure, it's possible for you to lose muscle from doing too much cardio,
but it's highly unlikely. Shying away from cardio completely because you
think you'll lose muscle is a huge mistake.
Only excessive amounts of cardio would cause you to lose muscle because
over-training tips the scale towards the catabolic side.
It's difficult to generalize and pinpoint one specific amount as too much,
but I think it's safe to assume that just about anyone could do up to
45 -60 minutes of cardio a day, 6 to 7 days a week without losing any
muscle - as long as the proper nutritional support is provided.
Trainer John Parillo has always been an advocate of lots of aerobics,
even for his bodybuilder clients who are trying to gain muscle mass.
"Aerobics can enhance your recovery from weight training by promoting
blood flow and oxygen transport to your muscles," says Parillo. "Aerobics
forces oxygen through your body, increasing the number and size of your
blood vessels.
Blood vessels are the 'supply routes' that transport oxygen and nutrients
to body tissues, including muscles, and carry waste products away for
muscular growth, repair and recovery. The expansion of this circulatory
network is called 'cardiovascular density.'"
So, according to Parillo, aerobics can actually enhance recovery from
weight training and increase muscular growth by developing the circulatory
pathways that provide nourishment to the muscles. Cardiovascular training
is important for fat burning, for good health and for muscle-building.
Losing muscle has more to do with inadequate diet than with excessive
aerobics. If you suspect you are losing muscle there are four likely causes:
1. You are not eating enough protein. Protein is the only nutrient
that is actually used to build muscle. To stay anabolic you must eat five
to six protein containing meals. Each meal should be spaced out approximately
three hours apart. Research has proven that if you are physically active,
you need a minimum of .8 grams to 1 gram of protein per pound of bodyweight.
2. Your carbohydrates are too low. Low carb diets are often used
for fat loss, but it is a mistake to cut your carbs too drastically. Carbohydrates
are protein-sparing, so even if you are eating large amounts of protein,
you can still lose muscle if you your carbs are too low.
3. You are not eating enough calories to support muscle growth.
This is the most common cause of muscle loss. When your calories are too
low, your body goes into "starvation mode." Your metabolism
slows down and your body actually burns muscle tissue to conserve energy.
Muscle is metabolically active tissue, requiring a great deal of caloric
energy just to maintain it. That's why your body will shed muscle if it
thinks you are starving.
4. You are not training with weights. It is a common misconception
that if you want to lose weight, you should start with cardio only and
add the weights later - another big mistake! It is the weight training
that keeps you from losing muscle while you are dieting.
You are much more likely to lose muscle from not eating enough than you
are from doing too much cardio. All too often, people are afraid to eat
a lot and do a lot of cardio at the same time. It doesn't seem to make
sense.
Logically, it seems like the two would cancel each other out - but the
opposite is true. Many people believe they must "starve" the
fat by drastically lowering calories. Unfortunately, this approach can
cause you to lose muscle along with the fat.
The only way to maintain your lean mass while losing fat is to feed the
muscles with plenty of nutritious calories and at the same time, burn
the fat off with cardio.
Whether your goal is muscle development, fat loss or both, you should
always include some form of cardiovascular activity as part of your training
program. Unless you're doing some kind of ultra-endurance regimen, AEROBICS
DOES NOT CAUSE MUSCLE LOSS, in fact it supports the pathways that help
you build it!
How
would your life be if you were defined like Tom Venuto?
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