3 Ways to Control Insulin and Get Jacked

Here’s what you need to know… Insulin is an anabolic hormone. Some people think that it only causes fat storage, but it also increases muscle growth. Insulin sensitivity in muscle is key. It will allow you to build more muscle and get lean. Exercise, diet, and certain supplements can improve insulin sensitivity. Two weeks is all it takes to start seeing benefits. Insulin gets a bad rap, but it’s simply a hormone the body makes in response to the food we eat. It can either help us store the energy we get from food in muscle cells (good) or in fat cells (not good). The more muscle you have –and the more insulin sensitive that muscle is –the greater capacity you’ll have to store muscle glycogen. Ideally, you’ll store more of what you eat as muscle while also getting leaner, i.e. reducing the amount of fat you’re storing. Impossible? Nope, you can change your body composition by changing your insulin sensitivity. And you can change your insulin sensitivity with these three tools. 1 – How to Control Insulin with Food Insulin regulates our metabolism and is released in greatest amounts when we eat. This is to our benefit depending on when, what, and how we’re eating. Some think that avoiding carbs is the key to leanness, but cutting them altogether makes muscle glycogen synthesis more difficult. And if you play sports or care about your lifting performance, then it’ll keep you from maximizing your potential. Carbs are a fast acting bioenergetic fuel source. Sure, an unnecessarily high carb intake throughout the day isn’t without consequence. It may even make you more insulin resistant depending on how excessive it is. Instead, consume the majority of your carbs around the time of your workout when you’ll need and use them most. Get Adequate Fiber, But Not Around Workouts: Increased fiber intake has been shown to have blood glucose lowering effects and may increase total body insulin sensitivity. The only caveat? Don’t have your high fiber meal around workout time. That’s when you’d want to have a greater insulin spike so that your workout nutrition can be directed to your muscle cells. Eat Slower: Multiple studies have shown that faster eaters are also more insulin resistant. These studies even accounted for factors like genetic predisposition, BMI, caloric intake, waist circumference, and triglyceride levels. Fast eating has been linked with obesity and it’s believed that speed eating makes it more difficult for your appetite suppressing hormones to take effect, which ultimately affects insulin’s ability to do its job. 2 – How to Control Insulin with Exercise Exercise is the antidote for raising insulin sensitivity in muscle cells. Studies show that a single workout can increase your insulin sensitivity for at least 16 hours post training. Both strength training and conditioning have been shown to make significant improvements to our insulin sensitivity in a short amount of time. Strength Training: Researchers have found that both insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake capacity in muscles increases with resistance training. Storing glycogen in the muscle cells is a gift that keeps on giving. As you train, you use your muscles, they use up the glycogen, you burn more total calories, and then when you eat you replace that depleted glycogen with more energy for later use. Add some glycogen-depleting finishers to your normal strength training: Timed kettlebell swings, snatches, clean and jerks CrossFit WODs Supersets Circuit training AMRAP (as many reps as possible) bodyweight exercises Conditioning: Both long, slow cardio and fast, intense cardio have their place in improving insulin sensitivity. And the improvements come quickly. One study showed that just two weeks of high intensity exercise (4-6 sets of 30 second sprints) made subjects significantly improve their insulin sensitivity. Researchers have found that aerobic exercise (in the zone-2 cardio range, 65-75 percent of VO2 Max) has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity. Their studies show that this happened through the activation of AMPK (AMP activated protein kinase), an enzyme involved in glucose and lipid metabolism. Likewise, high intensity exercise (greater than 80 percent of VO2 max) has been shown to improve insulin sensitivity and lower blood glucose for up to 1-3 days post exercise. Try intervals with these for a high intensity insulin sensitivity boosting workout. Incorporate 5 sets of 30 second intervals a few times a week into your program. Hill sprints Prowler pushes Jump rope Rowing ergometer Battling ropes 3 – How to Control Insulin with Supplementation You can also improve insulin sensitivity with proper supplementation. Although these substances can be found in food sources, it’s easier to get a potent and condensed source from supplementing. In fact, you may not even get the benefits without using a concentrated supplement. Cyanide 3-Glucoside: C3G comes from a powerful chemical from nature called anthocyanin. It’s
Origin: 3 Ways to Control Insulin and Get Jacked

Leave a comment