Ibuprofen....Danny81's new roid.

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  1. #1
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    Post Ibuprofen....Danny81's new roid.

    I would imagine it because of their age they just felt better.
    Ibuprofen or acetaminophen in long-term resistance training increases muscle mass/strength


    Ibuprofen or acetaminophen in long-term resistance training increases muscle mass/strength

    Taking daily recommended dosages of ibuprofen and acetaminophen caused a substantially greater increase over placebo in the amount of quadriceps muscle mass and muscle strength gained during three months of regular weight lifting, in a study by physiologists at the Human Performance Laboratory, Ball State University.

    Dr. Chad Carroll, a postdoctoral fellow working with Dr. Todd Trappe, reported study results at Experimental Biology 2008 in San Diego on April 6. His presentation was part of the scientific program of the American Physiological Society (APS).

    Thirty-six men and women, between 60 and 78 years of age (average age 65), were randomly assigned to daily dosages of either ibuprofen (such as that in Advil), acetaminophen (such as that in Tylenol), or a placebo. The dosages were identical to those recommended by the manufacturers and were selected to most closely mimic what chronic users of these medicines were likely to be taking. Neither the volunteers nor the scientists knew who was receiving which treatment until the end of the study.

    All subjects participated in three months of weight training, 15-20 minute sessions conducted in the Human Performance Laboratory three times per week. The researchers knew from their own and other studies that training at this intensity and for this time period would significantly increase muscle mass and strength. They expected the placebo group to show such increases, as its members did, but they were surprised to find that the groups using either ibuprofen or acetaminophen did even better. An earlier study from the laboratory, measuring muscle metabolism (or more precisely, muscle protein synthesis, the mechanism through which new protein is added to muscle), had looked at changes over a 24 hour period. This “acute” study found that both ibuprofen and acetaminophen had a negative impact, by blocking a specific enzyme cyclooxygenase, commonly referred to as COX.

    But that study looked at only one day. Over three months, says Dr. Trappe, the chronic consumption of ibuprofen or acetaminophen during resistance training appears to have induced intramuscular changes that enhance the metabolic response to resistance exercise, allowing the body to add substantially more new protein to muscle.

    The amount of change was measured in quadricep muscles using Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), the gold standard for determining muscle mass. The researchers now are conducting assays of muscle biopsies taken before and after the three-month period of resistance training, in order to understand the metabolic mechanism of the positive effects of ibuprofen and acetaminophen.

    One of the foci of Ball State’s Human Performance Laboratory is the adaptation of the elderly to exercise. Another is the loss of muscle mass that takes place when astronauts are exposed to long-term weightlessness. This work has implications for both groups, says Dr. Trappe.

    Source: Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology

  2. #2
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    less pain, produced better workouts thus the gains in size and strength?
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    Quote Originally Posted by soxmuscle View Post
    less pain, produced better workouts thus the gains in size and strength?
    Could be.

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    Yeah but long term usage will fuck up your stomach!
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    i thought NSAID's actually inhibited muscle growth by less inflammation, yadda yadda yadda?

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    Quote Originally Posted by lucifuge View Post
    i thought NSAID's actually inhibited muscle growth by less inflammation, yadda yadda yadda?
    Fucks up your liver depletes gluthione..why take NAC

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    Acetaminophen is very hepatotoxic. Chronic usage is not something i would recommend unless one really needed it, and increasing muscle mass is not a necessity.
    "The greatest obstacle to knowledge is not ignorance but the illusion of knowledge." -Barry Marshall, Nobel Laureate

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    Quote Originally Posted by hardasnails1973 View Post
    Fucks up your liver depletes gluthione..why take NAC
    welcome back bud.
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    Quote Originally Posted by fufu View Post
    welcome back bud.
    Good to be back, but I hardly have time to post like I have been. I do alternative medicine, nutritional consulting,nutrient testing, HRT dealing specializing in thyroid and adrenal imbalances. So I am pretty busy these days Oh yes I have come leaps and bounds in these past few years. I also have been giving lectures to drs and other health professionals about presenting case studies I have worked on to getting people from a diseased state back to not normal but optimal health. Things have been really good..

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