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February 24, 2015 at 11:15 pm #12212
Melvin McLainParticipantAssuming glycogen is somewhat depleted, and you eat a hi-glycemic carb meal…1. How long before that carb meal is converted into usable glycogen in the muscles?2. If the carb meal is low-fat (or hi-fat), does that affect the conversion time?Thanks.
February 25, 2015 at 8:26 pm #231477
Brandon D ChristParticipantComplex topic: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glycogenesis#Control_and_regulationsIt would depend on too many factors to give an accurate prediction. However usually you will clear blood sugar from any meal 2-3 hours after ingestion. Not exactly what you're asking, but for practical purposes that's probably more useful.
February 25, 2015 at 8:57 pm #231478
Melvin McLainParticipantHuh. Well, I'm not so much interested in a laboratory-precise answer.Keifer mentioned that fats (other than MCTs) take a couple of hours to become available for energy. I just thought you guys might also have a similar "rule of thumb" on the time-frame from carb intake to energy output (and whether fats affect it).
February 25, 2015 at 9:08 pm #231479
Richard SchmittModeratorThat's funny, I don't think CBL or CNS would be around without some sort of science/lab based studies or questions being answered.
February 25, 2015 at 9:12 pm #231480
Brandon D ChristParticipantHuh. Well, I'm not so much interested in a laboratory-precise answer.Keifer mentioned that fats (other than MCTs) take a couple of hours to become available for energy. I just thought you guys might also have a similar "rule of thumb" on the time-frame from carb intake to energy output (and whether fats affect it).
Carbs are available almost instantly after they are ingested, not the whole meal at once, but your blood sugar rises very quickly after eating a meal with carbs. Your body does not need to convert glucose to glycogen for it to be used as energy.
February 25, 2015 at 9:22 pm #231481
Melvin McLainParticipantHuh. Well, I'm not so much interested in a laboratory-precise answer.Keifer mentioned that fats (other than MCTs) take a couple of hours to become available for energy. I just thought you guys might also have a similar "rule of thumb" on the time-frame from carb intake to energy output (and whether fats affect it).
Carbs are available almost instantly after they are ingested, not the whole meal at once, but your blood sugar rises very quickly after eating a meal with carbs. Your body does not need to convert glucose to glycogen for it to be used as energy.
Interesting. Are they still available as energy up until (and while) being stored as glycogen? Or do blood glucose levels drop faster than glycogen storage can take place?Thanks.
February 25, 2015 at 9:29 pm #231482
Jenelle BrewerParticipantInteresting. Are they still available as energy up until (and while) being stored as glycogen? Or do blood glucose levels drop faster than glycogen storage can take place?Thanks.
It is my understanding that the body tries to maintain a certain level of blood glucose at all times ... that it is constantly working to reach homeostasis.So the carbs are available for energy right away -- as ibob said, pretty much immediately. If we are sitting around and NOT using them for energy, that extra blood glucose will go to refilling liver and muscle glycogen stores, and whatever can't be used there will be converted to and stored as fat.This is what I have gathered so far. I am sure someone can correct me if I'm wrong. 🙂
February 25, 2015 at 9:30 pm #231483
Brandon D ChristParticipantHuh. Well, I'm not so much interested in a laboratory-precise answer.Keifer mentioned that fats (other than MCTs) take a couple of hours to become available for energy. I just thought you guys might also have a similar "rule of thumb" on the time-frame from carb intake to energy output (and whether fats affect it).
Carbs are available almost instantly after they are ingested, not the whole meal at once, but your blood sugar rises very quickly after eating a meal with carbs. Your body does not need to convert glucose to glycogen for it to be used as energy.
Interesting. Are they still available as energy up until (and while) being stored as glycogen? Or do blood glucose levels drop faster than glycogen storage can take place?Thanks.
Blood sugar is always available for energy because you always have blood sugar in your system. Otherwise you'd die.
February 25, 2015 at 9:31 pm #231484
Richard SchmittModeratorInteresting. Are they still available as energy up until (and while) being stored as glycogen? Or do blood glucose levels drop faster than glycogen storage can take place?Thanks.
It is my understanding that the body tries to maintain a certain level of blood glucose at all times ... that it is constantly working to reach homeostasis.So the carbs are available for energy right away -- as ibob said, pretty much immediately. If we are sitting around and NOT using them for energy, that extra blood glucose will go to refilling liver and muscle glycogen stores, and whatever can't be used there will be converted to and stored as fat.This is what I have gathered so far. I am sure someone can correct me if I'm wrong. 🙂
Spot on ;D
February 25, 2015 at 9:53 pm #231485
Melvin McLainParticipantThanks ibob and curious for the helpful info.
February 27, 2015 at 2:07 am #231486
Melvin McLainParticipantIn case anyone's interested, this PDF pretty much has the info I was looking for.http://smscsqlx.sasktelwebhosting.com/services/nutr/musclefuel.pdf
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