125x125 Ads

How To Supplement A HIIT Program Properly

By Russ Hollywood


If you are trying to learn how to build muscle with HIIT then you may have noticed how much confusion surrounds this popular training method. Despite it's huge popularity, many people make some crucial mistakes when designing their high intensity interval program.

The main area which needs to be looked at is pre-workout nutrition. There are many individuals who are more than prepared to go all out in the gym on a daily basis, but lack the nutritional knowledge to get the rewards their hard efforts deserve.

If you can take the necessary steps to provide your muscles with the right fuel for each session then you will in turn increase your overall results by almost 30%, according to the latest scientific studies on the topic. []

While regular cardiovascular activity works slowly on your fat stores, interval training takes a different route. It mainly focuses on your body's stores of carbohydrates. This means the focus of your nutrition needs to shift if you are to get the most from this method.

The real benefits of this training happen after you leave the gym, where your body continues burning off calories at an increased rate for up to 14 hours. You may have heard this phenomenon called the afterburn effect. Instead of slowly chipping away at your fat stores and then ending the process when you leave the gym like regular cardio exercise, a high intensity workout depletes your carbohydrate stores first before going to work on fat stores. In doing this, your body enters a process called EPOC after your training has finished. It protects what little carb stores you have left and burns off excess fat instead. This process lasts an incredibly long time, and one calorie burnt during a high intensity session equates to around nine calories burnt during a long cardio workout.

So, the key thing we want to achieve is to help you burn through your body's excess carbohydrate stores while you are working out in the gym. For this very reason, consuming a high carbohydrate meal before a workout would make very little sense.

Does this mean all of those people who insist on training first thing in the morning on an empty stomach are actually onto something?

Not quite. While performing interval training on an empty stomach is slightly more beneficial than performing it with a ton of carbs in your system, there is an even better way to increase results further. The biggest mistake people tend to make when watching their carbohydrate intake is forgetting to increase protein intake. As a result their body burns off a lot of muscle. To avoid this, simply increase your protein intake. This can be done by hitting the gym after a whey protein shake instead of a carbohydrate heavy meal.

One other minor mistake many people make is to go with BCAA supplements after a session. Recent studies confirm that consuming Essential Amino Acids (EAA's) instead of BCAA's will increase results further. While any branched chain amino acids supplement will provide you with three of the key amino acids for building lean muscle tissue, they neglect the others. Amino acids function as a team, therefore taking EAA's would be much more functional.

Secondly, science tells us that consuming your amino acids before your workout yields up to 30% higher uptake into the muscles, so ignore the common trend of mixing it with your post-workout protein shake. The perfect pre-workout cocktail before a high intensity interval training session would consist of around 15 grams of whey protein and a serving of essential amino acids.

Getting the right kind of nutrition into your system before you train can be crucial when performing HIIT sessions on a regular basis. Learning how to build muscle is often a game of opinion, with many exercise enthusiasts lost in a sea of misinformation. By looking at the very latest science on the subject, you can get more from every session in the gym.




About the Author:



0 comments:

Post a Comment

 

Copyright © 2016 • World Weight Loss • Design by Dzignine