Carb Cycling and Back-loading for Anabolic Effects

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By <address>John Kiefer</address>
Carbs are a hot topic. Everyone’s eating them first thing in the morning, or cycling them, some people are going anabolic — having carbs just on the weekend — and still others are having just one Carb Nite® a week. But why isn’t anybody back-loading?
Not everyone’s concerned about their carbs, as some people eat them at-will without affecting strength, muscle mass or waistline. That’s not me. It’s not most of the people I work with. Like them, I want all the benefits carbs have to offer without the disadvantages; I want to get muscular and stay lean; or get muscular and get lean. That’s why I discovered back-loading, the best dietary method to achieve both at once.
One thing the industry has realized over the past few years is that carbs need to be cycled for goals beyond day-to-day leaving. Losing weight, building muscle and increasing endurance benefit from cycling carbs; making weight for a powerlifting meet benefits from cycling carbs; even trying to tighten up for wedding photos benefits from cycling carbs. For cosmetic purposes, the formula is well established, and my first book represents a precise and effective version.
Why all this fuss over carbs? Carbs cause hormonal and metabolic changes in the body beyond the capability of any other nutrient and if a pharmaceutical company discovered carbs today, glucose would probably cost $100 per gram. Eating carbs regulates growth in the body directly and indirectly by affecting over a dozen hormones. There is wisdom in spending so much time deciphering the perfect carb-intake formula for various goals.
The one formula that’s eluded the industry is how to gain muscle while minimizing fat, or even possibly losing fat. I’ve seen this claim many times in many magazines and on many websites for various workout and diet plans. Most fit under the philosophy of, “do ridiculous workouts that last hours and eat very little.” A couple noticeable exceptions exist: Dr. Mauro Di Pasquale’s Anabolic Diet and Shelby Starnes’ concept of carb cycling. Programs similar to these two exist (my Carb Nite® diet is a refined version of the Anabolic Diet), but all float the concept that carbs should be cycled on a day-to-day or weekly basis. Recent research contradicts these strategies for gaining muscle. The body needs two things everyday to grow muscle, a lot of calories and a lot of carbs.
I’ve eaten a lot of calories and a lot of carbs everyday while training and I did grow muscle, but I also got fat. The current school of nutrient timing says eat most of your carbs early in the day and few at night. So I switched to eating most of my carbs first thing in the morning and fewer with each meal until bedtime. Again, I gained muscle and got fat. At this point, I was frustrated as hell. It took me a few years to learn how exercise changes skeletal muscle at the cellular level and how to use this information to time carbohydrates during the day for muscular gains and fat obliteration.
Ingesting carbs—most types of carbs—releases insulin, the body’s utmost signaler of growth. Insulin sensitivity is highest in the morning and, as it’s often understood, this means that cells of the body absorb carbs better in the morning than the evening. Thought of in this way, only skeletal muscle and fat cells matter, as most other tissue—nervous system cells, kidneys, the liver, the small intestines, etc—can use carbs with or without insulin. Fat and muscle respond stronger to insulin levels in the morning than the evening.
It is true that eating carbs in the morning allows both fat and muscle to grow more than eating carbs at night. But exercise changes this. Exercise changes everything, even the way skeletal muscle responds to insulin and blood sugar. Resistance training triggers two important changes in muscle tissue regarding carb metabolism. First, heavy resistance training increases sensitivity to insulin in muscle for up to 48 hours post-workout. Second, for a few hours post-workout, muscle cells can use carbs without insulin.
Resistance training, therefore, dissects the day into pre- and post-workout, expanding these concepts from the hour before and after training to the part of the day before training and the part of the day after.
Imagine waiting until 3 or 4 in the evening to lift. Not eating carbs up to this point, neither fat nor muscle has had much of a signal to grow. After training, the consumption of carbs begins en masse, starting with the post-workout shake containing copious amounts of a simple carbohydrate powder. A massive growth signal ensues, but in the evening after lifting, only muscle can take advantage of the signal and not body fat. This effect continues on through the night until bedtime. No more back-fat growth; no more beer-belly expansion; no more second chin. Back-loading carbs in the day tunes the body to grow primarily muscle.

The pre-workout part of my day consists, for me, of ultra-low carb. I consume 30 grams or less of carbohydrates in the first half of the day, excluding fiber. Some people can handle more, and I’ve worked with people who can eat up to 100 grams spread over three to four meals before the training session. I am not one of these people, and before experimenting, I suggesting starting at the 30 gram level or less.
After training, the only meal I keep low-fat is my post-workout shake, which is zero fat. It contains 50 grams of protein, 100 grams of a glucose-based carb powder with no other caloric nutrients. Otherwise, the latter half of the day is filled with high-carb meals, but not necessarily low-fat. The sharp spike in metabolism that accompanies the rush of carbs helps burn the dietary fat through the hours of sleep.
If muscle gets the largest signal to grow after the workout, what’s happening before and during the workout without all the carbs? That’s a fair question. Without dietary modification, before lifting, the body balances the anabolic and catabolic signals within skeletal muscle. To shift this signal in favor of anabolic signaling requires regular ingestion of a fast-absorbing protein, such as whey or casein hydrolysate, together with a few grams of the branched-chain amino acid leucine.
During the workout, glycogen stores and ketone metabolism fuel muscles. As long as glycogen reserves stay full, there’s plenty of fuel for lifting without compromising muscle tissue. Keeping carb stores full is one of the primary goals of the post-workout feedings.
Back-loading carbs runs against every dietary recommendation to guarantee a solid, strong workout. The body needs carbs to lift heavy, or so the advice goes. In most situations, assuming adequate nightly carb intake, strength, nevertheless, increases when back-loading carbs. This may sound counter-intuitive but not when considering the drug-like effects of carbs.
Optimum strength is a balance between muscle size and neural efficiency. On a daily basis, muscular size can be taken as constant. Neural efficiency depends on several factors that are daily considerations and even hourly, such as the ingesting of carbs, which actually puts a stress on the body, knocking it from homeostatis.
Carbs can be one of the strongest disruptions of homeostatis, so if meal timing isn’t exact come workout time (along with a myriad of other factors) not only is the body fighting against the iron, but it’s fighting to achieve balance. Carb timing—or mistiming—may be the most common cause of a crappy workout and missed lifts.
Too many grams of carbs may be consumed too close to training time, causing a hyperglycaemic state in which nervous system cells begin firing inefficiently, blowing through calcium reserves. Too few carbs and glycaemic distress occurs, sweat starts pouring despite chills and strength dissipates. As a result, assuming glycogen stores were sufficiently replenished the night before, strength often increases and stabilizes—is more consistent from day to day—when forgoing carbs before lifting.
Granted, back-loading carbs requires effort. I have a flexible schedule, as do most of the athletes I work with, which makes planning the day around diet and workout feasible and necessary. Maximum gains require planning life around training. But it’s not always possible to get a training session in at 3 or 4 pm. Maybe training time is 7pm. Used with resistance training, no matter what time during the day, back-loading carbs always provides maximum anabolic signals to the muscle, while increasing fat burning, even if post-workout doesn’t occur until 9pm.
There’s a lot to consider and I understand not wanting to go through with all that’s required, but the payoff, for those who accept the challenge, is high. In the past two decades, after working with countless athletes at all levels, back-loading carbs is the only dietary technique I’ve seen that consistently produces strength and muscle gains while limiting—and sometimes even eliminating—body fat.
About the Author

John Kiefer is a nutritional consultant, physique and performance coach and author of the fat loss guide, The Carb Nite® Solution (http://www.carbnite.com). His background as a physicist brings scientific rigor to his years of experience. You can read more about his philosophy at http://dangerouslyhardcore.com.
 
So to be sure I understood that, he's saying to keep the carbs light throughout the day, and pound a decent amount right after your workout?
 
So to be sure I understood that, he's saying to keep the carbs light throughout the day, and pound a decent amount right after your workout?

yeah right after your workout and throughout the night. Here is a little more from another one of his posts (the rest can be found here)

Carbohydrate metabolism isn’t as simple or easy to understand as pop-media and even sports nutritionists imply. The classic version: carbs get into the bloodstream as sugar, which hits the pancreas and causes a release of insulin. Insulin rushes through the body and shuttles sugar into cells. This is the 300 ft view.
Looking closer, it’s not insulin that carries sugar into cells; specialized transporters exist within each cell that bring sugar across the cell membrane, transporters called, not surprisingly, glucose transporters (GLUTs). The class I GLUTs—GLUT1 through GLUT4—are the best understood. (There are two more classes that contain GLUTs 5-12, but—besides the fructose transporter, GLUT5—science is still deciphering their function, and some, like GLUT6 and GLUT8 actually block glucose transport.)
Different tissue contains different transporters. Tissue with GLUT1s, GLUT2s or GLUT3s use sugar whether insulin levels rise or not. Cells of the pancreas, kidney, small blood vessels and nervous system, including those in the brain, contain GLUTs 1 through 3. That doesn’t mean these cells need sugar, only that they can always use it regardless of the presence or absence of insulin.
GLUT4, however, sits tucked within the surface of the cell membrane until the cell senses insulin, at which point the GLUT4s move to the surface and start grabbing sugar and pulling it in. Fat cells and muscle cells contain GLUT4 receptors. When the experts say the body is most sensitive to insulin in the morning, they mean GLUT4 tissue—body fat and skeletal muscle.
The plus side to this information: fat cells can’t store as much sugar as fat in the evening. The minus side: muscles can’t use carbs effectively either. There is, anyhow, a way to keep the plus and eliminate the minus. It’s something everybody reading this blog already does: RT—resistance training. (And if not, why the hell are you here?)
fibroblastGLUT4translocation.gif
GLUT4 translocation in a fat cell
RT does three things. 1) It increases the number of GLUT4 receptors per cell—muscles can then absorb and use sugar more rapidly. 2) RT makes muscles hyper-responsive to insulin—fat cells may not respond well in the evening to insulin, but muscles will. 3) RT moves GLUT4s to the cell surface without insulin—cells can now start soaking up sugar for quicker recovery after a workout, even in the evening. Effects (1) and (2) last about 48 hrs, and effect (3) is immediate and short-lived, perhaps a few hours at most.
Think about that for a minute. This is the stuff worth getting excited about. If you’re like me, you might be carb-sensitive, storing water and fat in your love handles and gut rapidly upon over eating for several days, particularly overeating carbs. By understanding a little more than the absolute basics, you can figure out when to time your carbs to increase muscle growth while making it difficult for fat cells to expand or multiply.



Here’s a sample day of food choice per meal when Kiefer's slimming down.
Breakfast: Skip
Meal 1, 9am: Eggs, ham, cheese, tomatoes, protein shake
Meal 2, noon: beef, broccoli with butter, almonds, protein shake
Meal 3, 2pm: low-fat cottage cheese, almond butter, strawberries, protein shake, creatine
Meal 4, 4pm: Post workout shake containing roughly 60 grams of protein and 150 grams of carbs
Meal 5: 6pm: chicken, green beans, rice
Meal 6: 9pm: shit load of non-wheat, low-fat carbs (sweet rice cakes, my personal recipe for non-fat mashed potatoes), protein shake
 
Ok, I'm tracking. So keep the carbs light, except for after workouts. My workouts Mon-Fri are no earlier than 7pm. My weekend workouts are usually much earlier. Would this also apply to a good cardio session? I do 25-30mins of cardio at 6am, then come home, get ready for work, and start my day. Then after work I come home and get ready for the gym. I go do my RT, then another 20-25 mins of cardio. Then normally I come home and hook up a shake then eat dinner. Dinner is usually very low carbs, if any at all. From what I'm reading here, is I should eat more carbs at dinner, right? Now in saying that, can those carbs be potatoes and/or noodles? I read something about non-wheat carbs, which the potatoes would be ok, but the noodles are not? Or how do you interpret that?
 
Ok, I'm tracking. So keep the carbs light, except for after workouts. You got it. My workouts Mon-Fri are no earlier than 7pm. You could start chugging your PWO Carbs midway through your workout. My weekend workouts are usually much earlier. 3-5 pm is the ideal time to start a workout. Would this also apply to a good cardio session? No I believe all of his research is based on Resistance Training. I do 25-30mins of cardio at 6am, then come home, get ready for work, and start my day. That is fine and I believe per his protocol you would then wait til around 10 AM before your first meal. Then after work I come home and get ready for the gym. I go do my RT, then another 20-25 mins of cardio. Now is when you would pound the PWO Carbs and protein ~100-150g Carbs and around 50g WPI. Then normally I come home and hook up a shake then eat dinner. Dinner is usually very low carbs, if any at all. From what I'm reading here, is I should eat more carbs at dinner, right? Correct from PWO til bed you want to pound all the carbs you would typically take in throughout the whole day. Now in saying that, can those carbs be potatoes and/or noodles? Yes or Rice or yogurt, etc...I read something about non-wheat carbs, which the potatoes would be ok, but the noodles are not? Or how do you interpret that?

You can ask him whatever here http://forums.dangerouslyhardcore.com/ it's his personal forum to discuss his articles, posts,etc...
 
What if you have a job that is semi-strenuous from mid mirning till mid afternoon?

Ill die without carbs with my work...

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What if you have a job that is semi-strenuous from mid mirning till mid afternoon?

Ill die without carbs with my work...

Sent from my LG-LS970 using Tapatalk 2

ive cycle carbs daily, and got use to it, i wouldnt take carbs in until before the gym, and i would blow up while working out, truth is now i cant eat much in the morning or afternoon anyways, i barely eat during those times and then i load up on oatmeal and carb drink before the gym and i love it, then during the gym i sip on a 50/50 carb/protien drink and then after the gym is when i eat my solid meal along with another shake, works great for me, and ive done this for years
 
What about keeping myself energized enough during work, i work outside and is physical...

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What about keeping myself energized enough during work, i work outside and is physical...

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yeah you need your carbs and energy brutha, just make sure they are complex carbs brutha, you would be AMAZED at what a difference it would make by killing the simple sugars and being strict with just complex carbs and healthy fats
 
So some oats and an avacado before work, then gym after with the method u mentioned?

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