Body’s "preferred" fuel source…

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  • #2114

    mindspin
    Keymaster

    Which statement below is true?When you are on a low carb diet (50g or less per day), glycogen stores have been depleted and you are doing both resistance training (4x week) and HIIT cardio (7x week), your body will fuel itself as follows:  A) first fats/proteins consumed, then stored body fat then protein (broken down muscle tissue).B) first fats/proteins consumed, then protein (broken down muscle tissue) then stored body fat.C) first fats/proteins consumed and then protein (broken down muscle tissue).  No stored body fat will be used.D) none of the above.This isn't a trick question.  I'm just curious what everyone thinks and if there are any studies out there that actually shed light on this.Thanks 🙂

    #51784

    monsieurjkb
    Member

    It depends if you're sitting on your ass or in the middle of one of those insanely frequent HIIT workouts. BUT if your glycogen stores are depleted, then surely you'd be running on fats/ketones and however much glucose your body/brain required from protein/muscle tissue.Your body does not work on one substrate at any given time. It varies depending on what you demand from it: high intensity requires more sugar, whether it's from stores or muscle or dietary protein.lower intensity/rest will use more fat or ketones than glucose.Be more specific?

    #51785

    mindspin
    Guest

    So if the goal is maximum fat burning while maintaining muscle, will the body break down muscle tissue for fuel (during resistance training and/or HIIT cardio), or will it use fat reserves?  Again, assuming glycogen stores are depleted.Thanks 🙂

    #51786

    Lasse Elsbak
    Participant

    that depends… when you reach the glycolytic threshold you have no choice but to burn carbs, but that point can be moved quite a bit. At this point, if you have no glycogen, you have to convert amino acids to glucose, or stop AFAIK. I don't know all the specifics, but there are a lot of variables. How used is your body to using fat for fuel? Doing a ketogenic diet seems to push the threshold higher, and you can train for it as well. Kiefer has mentioned this in some of the podcasts.

    #51787

    mindspin
    Guest

    Maybe this is a better way to ask the question:If someone's glycogen stores are depleted and they are on an ultra-low carb diet, what will their bodies use for fuel when:A - doing resistance training B - doing continuous cardio - 40 minutes treadmill 4mphC - doing HIIT cardio - 20 minutes with four 30 second sprintsD - Sitting at a deskThanks

    #51788

    monsieurjkb
    Member

    The answer I first gave still applies. High intensity exercise at any length of time over a few reps will require glucose. If your body has no stored glycogen, it'll make glucose for the type of activies that require it: higher reps with heavy weights will require more glucose than lower reps with heavy weights.

    A - doing resistance training answered aboveB - doing continuous cardio - 40 minutes treadmill 4mph brisk walking will use mostly fat for fuelC - doing HIIT cardio - 20 minutes with four 30 second sprints the sprints themselves will probably use a bit of glucose but the effects of HIT like sprints is supposedly what happens 24 hrs after the sprints themselves. Sprints will help fat loss assuming your diet is onD - Sitting at a desk if your on a keto diet, then you'll use ketones probably

    HERE: http://www.exrx.net/Nutrition/Substrates.html Just apply all that's here to a situation with no stored carbs.

    #51789

    mindspin
    Guest

    The answer I first gave still applies. High intensity exercise at any length of time over a few reps will require glucose. If your body has no stored glycogen, it'll make glucose for the type of activies that require it: higher reps with heavy weights will require more glucose than lower reps with heavy weights.

    A - doing resistance training answered aboveB - doing continuous cardio - 40 minutes treadmill 4mph brisk walking will use mostly fat for fuelC - doing HIIT cardio - 20 minutes with four 30 second sprints the sprints themselves will probably use a bit of glucose but the effects of HIT like sprints is supposedly what happens 24 hrs after the sprints themselves. Sprints will help fat loss assuming your diet is onD - Sitting at a desk if your on a keto diet, then you'll use ketones probably

    HERE: http://www.exrx.net/Nutrition/Substrates.html Just apply all that's here to a situation with no stored carbs.

    cool...thanks.

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