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An Easy Way to Build 4 Pounds of Extra Muscle

01dragonslayer

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The Bedtime Protein Shake​

It’s a strategy everyone’s talked about for years, but we never knew for sure if it worked. Now we do. Here’s how to build muscle in bed.

We all kinda-sorta know that having a protein shake before going to bed is a good strategy to build muscle, but it’s still satisfying to read a scientific paper that says we’re not just right, but really right.

It’s particularly satisfying when that paper is a big review that looked at 45 papers on the subject and managed to draw some conclusions on how to best use the protein-drink-at-night strategy.

The Pre-Bed Protein Shake: All Muscle, No Fat​

Tim Snijders, the lead author of the review, is no stranger to research on resistance training and bedtime protein ingestion. In 2015, he found that lifters who drank 28 grams of protein (14 grams of casein and 14 grams of casein hydrolysate) before bed gained about 4 more pounds of additional muscle than a control group over 12 weeks.

That’s damn impressive, and when he recently looked at the bulk of the papers on the subject, most agreed that drinking protein before bed increased muscle protein synthesis (MPS) dramatically without leading to any increases in fat.

Snijders wrote:

“All protein ingested prior to sleep is used for protein synthesis. When exercise is performed earlier that evening, a large part of ingested protein is directed to muscle protein synthesis and is not stored.”
It is true, however, that some of the studies he looked at didn’t show much or even any additional muscle protein synthesis overnight. But the researchers involved in those studies might’ve used insufficient amounts of protein, protein with a rotten biologic value 52 (BV), or a resistance program more suited to sarcopenic poodles than bodybuilders or strength athletes.


One-Mealworm-Protein-Shake-Coming-Right-Up
One-Mealworm-Protein-Shake-Coming-Right-Up1000×409 62.3 KB

Workout and Protein Timing​

Is there something special about ingesting protein before bed? Or is it simply a matter of increasing total protein intake?

Here’s what Snijders thought about it:

“Despite a relatively high amount of protein ingested earlier in the day, pre-sleep protein ingestion would presumably still provide an anabolic stimulus on overnight muscle protein synthesis rates, thereby enhancing daily muscle tissue re-conditioning.”
Another possible question arises from the timing of the resistance training. In some of the studies where they found a positive association between bedtime protein and additional muscle protein synthesis, the resistance training took place in the evening between 8:00 and 10:00 PM.

That’s promising for lifters who hit the gym in the evening, but what about lifters who work out in the morning or late afternoon? While the answers aren’t yet clear, my guess is that the late afternoon trainers would still be in their anabolic “window” at bedtime and would still benefit from drinking some additional protein before hitting the sack.

Morning trainees would also benefit from late-night protein in general, but whether they’d enjoy the same dramatic increases in muscle protein synthesis is unknown (they might simply benefit from adding to their total protein intake rather than a time-sensitive increase in MPS).

If you do train in the morning, you could try a little experiment. Save some or all of your arm training for the evening when you’re watching TV. Pull out a pair of dumbbells and do a few sets of 10-6-10 training 443. Then, drink your bedtime protein and observe what, if anything, happens to your arms over several weeks.

What Do I Drink and How Much?​

Drink a high-quality shake containing casein before bed. Most of the studies used casein, probably because it’s a slower-digesting protein, so it’s not known how well other proteins would fare in similar circumstances.
 
Sleep is the only time we are naturally anabolic. I’ve been eating last meal/ protein shake 20-30 mins before bed for awhile.
 

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