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Welcome to The Health Center! Your source for Health, Fitness, Diet, Exercise, Working Out, Bodybuilding, and More!


  • precontest The Peaking Axis, Part I: Effects Of Carbs & Water.
  • precontest The Peaking Axis, Part II: Effects Of Sodium And Potassium.
  • Anabolic Effects of Branched-Chain Amino Acids by Durand
  • Skeletal Muscle Protein Metabolism and Resistance Exercise Robert R. Wolfe
  • Merry Christmas, Bob by Chris Shugart -- A fun and bold, yet inspritational article.
  • Myths Under The Microscope: The Low Intensity Fat Burning Zone & Fasted Cardio By Alan Aragon
  • An interesting Sports Illustrated article on bodybuilding and Arnold Schwarzengger from October 14th, 1974
  • Effects of repeated creatine supplementation on muscle, plasma, and urine creatine levels. A study abstract
  • Exogenous amino acids stimulate human muscle anabolism without interfering with the response to mixed meal ingestion
  • The effect of caffeine, green tea and tyrosine on thermogenesis and energy intake.
  • Effect of Explosive versus Slow Contractions and Exercise Intensity on Energy Expenditure.
  • Fish Oil and Fat Loss
  • No Willpower? 25 Fast Ways To Lose Weight
  • Current State of Science Review focusing on efficacy, safety and various uses for oral Omega-3 Fatty Acids.
  • Combining fish-oil supplements with regular aerobic exercise improves body composition and cardiovascular disease risk factors.
  • Flaxseed Shows Potential to Reduce Hot Flashes
  • Chronic stress is bad for the brain
  • International Society of Sports Nutrition Position Stand: Protein and Exercise.
  • Effects of magnesium supplementation on blood parameters of athletes at rest and after exercise.
  • Serum testosterone and urinary excretion of steroid hormone metabolites after administration of a high-dose zinc supplement
  • A look at the value of vitamin C
  • The Vitamin Myth - a Reader's Digest article on the less beneficial side of vitamin supplements


  • Vitamin C


    1: Free Radic Biol Med. 2001 Sep 15;31(6):745-53.

    Supplementation with vitamin C and N-acetyl-cysteine increases oxidative stress in humans after an acute muscle injury induced by eccentric exercise.

    Childs A, Jacobs C, Kaminski T, Halliwell B, Leeuwenburgh C. Biochemistry of Aging Laboratory, Center for Exercice Science, College of Human Performance, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA.

    There has been no investigation to determine if the widely used over-the-counter, water-soluble antioxidants vitamin C and N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC) could act as pro-oxidants in humans during inflammatory conditions. We induced an acute-phase inflammatory response by an eccentric arm muscle injury. The inflammation was characterized by edema, swelling, pain, and increases in plasma inflammatory indicators, myeloperoxidase and interleukin-6. Immediately following the injury, subjects consumed a placebo or vitamin C (12.5 mg/kg body weight) and NAC (10 mg/kg body weight) for 7 d. The resulting muscle injury caused increased levels of serum bleomycin-detectable iron and the amount of iron was higher in the vitamin C and NAC group. The concentrations of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), creatine kinase (CK), and myoglobin were significantly elevated 2, 3, and 4 d postinjury and returned to baseline levels by day 7. In addition, LDH and CK activities were elevated to a greater extent in the vitamin C and NAC group. Levels of markers for oxidative stress (lipid hydroperoxides and 8-iso prostaglandin F2alpha; 8-Iso-PGF2alpha) and antioxidant enzyme activities were also elevated post-injury. The subjects receiving vitamin C and NAC had higher levels of lipid hydroperoxides and 8-Iso-PGF2alpha 2 d after the exercise. This acute human inflammatory model strongly suggests that vitamin C and NAC supplementation immediately post-injury, transiently increases tissue damage and oxidative stress.

    PMID: 11557312 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

     

    1: Nutr Metab (Lond). 2006 Aug 31;3:35.

    Marginal vitamin C status is associated with reduced fat oxidation during submaximal exercise in young adults.

    Johnston CS, Corte C, Swan PD. Department of Nutrition, Arizona State University, Mesa, USA. carol.johnston@asu.edu

    BACKGROUND: Vitamin C is a cofactor in the biosynthesis of carnitine, a molecule required for the oxidation of fatty acids. A reduction in the ability to oxidize fat may contribute to the reported inverse relationship between vitamin C status and adiposity. To examine this possibility, we conducted a preliminary trial to evaluate the impact of vitamin C status on fat oxidation during submaximal exercise. METHODS: Fat energy expenditure was determined in individuals with marginal (n = 15) or adequate (n = 7) vitamin C status during a submaximal, 60-minute treadmill test. Subsequently, eight of the subjects with marginal vitamin C status completed an 8-week double-blind, placebo-controlled, depletion-repletion trial with submaximal exercise testing. RESULTS: Individuals with marginal vitamin C status oxidized 25% less fat per kg body weight during the treadmill test as compared to individuals with adequate vitamin C status. Fat oxidation during exercise was inversely related to fatigue (r = -0.611, p = 0.009). Vitamin C repletion of vitamin C depleted subjects (500 mg vitamin C/d) raised fat energy expenditure during exercise 4-fold as compared to depleted control subjects (p = 0.011). CONCLUSION: These preliminary results show that low vitamin C status is associated with reduced fat oxidation during submaximal exercise. Low vitamin C status may partially explain the inverse relationship between vitamin C status and adiposity and why some individuals are unsuccessful in their weight loss attempts.

    PMID: 16945143 [PubMed]

     

    1: Biol Psychiatry. 2002 Aug 15;52(4):371-4

    High-dose ascorbic acid increases intercourse frequency and improves mood: a randomized controlled clinical trial.

    Brody S. Center for and the Psychosomatic and Psychobiological Research, University of Trier, Germany.

    BACKGROUND: Ascorbic acid (AA) modulates catecholaminergic activity, decreases stress reactivity, approach anxiety and prolactin release, improves vascular function, and increases oxytocin release. These processes are relevant to sexual behavior and mood. METHODS: In this randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled 14 day trial of sustained-release AA (42 healthy young adults; 3000 mg/day Cetebe) and placebo (39 healthy young adults), subjects with partners recorded penile-vaginal intercourse (FSI), noncoital partner sex, and masturbation in daily diaries, and also completed the Beck Depression Inventory before and after the trial. RESULTS: The AA group reported greater FSI (but, as hypothesized, not other sexual behavior) frequency, an effect most prominent in subjects not cohabiting with their sexual partner, and in women. The AA but not placebo group also experienced a decrease in Beck Depression scores. CONCLUSIONS: AA appears to increase FSI, and the differential benefit to noncohabitants suggests that a central activation or disinhibition, rather than peripheral mechanism may be responsible.

    PMID: 12208645 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]



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    Last modified: March 10, 2008

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