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Originally posted by LAM never tasted coffee..can anyone explain what it tastes like ? and don't say chicken !
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Originally posted by LAM never tasted coffee..can anyone explain what it tastes like ? and don't say chicken !
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Originally posted by ponyboy Funny, all that research TCD, I was always told that coffee was good after a long night of drinking because it caused vasodilation and got rid of your headache through increased blood flow. I guess those frat boy remedies don't hold a lot of water (and neither do I after a long night of drinking).
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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy It's basically suggesting that it's not just caffiene that seems to perk you up - it's something in the coffee that kinda interacts with the caffiene. |
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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy IAB: The reason i posted it was cause it got me thinking whether people using ECA would possibly benefit more from actually "drinking" their caffiene as opposed to taking it in pill-form. |

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Originally posted by TJohn Coffee is my friend. TJohn |
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Originally posted by twarrior My boss showed me an article in a recent Mens' Health magazine, that coffee can inhibit muscular growth due to the caffeine blocks the body from utilizing calcium. IS there any research on that??? |
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Originally posted by twarrior My boss showed me an article in a recent Mens' Health magazine, that coffee can inhibit muscular growth due to the caffeine blocks the body from utilizing calcium. IS there any research on that??? |
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Originally posted by sawheet Coffe has Theopholyne in it. I think Theopholyne is a beta inhibiter that aids in dialation of the bronchial airways, too lazy to reasearch that. I love my Starbucks every day!! |

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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy Not sure about actual growth, but i know that caffiene can mess around with the calcium release at the synaptic cleft so can effect contractions. |
| So, in my case (goal=fat loss/lean gain) it would not be advisable to use caffeine in any form..correct? |
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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy Caffiene increases short term (i.e a few hours) insulin resistance because it causes fat mobilising into the blood stream. Anything that does this can cause a certain degree of insulin resistance. |
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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy What stress hormones? |
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Originally posted by The_Chicken_Daddy Adrenalin and noradrenalin (provided they're stimulated in sufficient enough amounts) are both anti-catabolic cause they shift the body's burning to fat. Anything that causes sufficient beta-adrenergic stimulation beyond a certain threshold causes this. The type of hormone i'd think of when someone says "stress hormone" would be cortisol and the like because they break down proteins for glucose. So now i'm thinking, if adrenalin and noradrenalin really are classed as stress hormones, whether all stress hormones are catabolic as i'd said. It doesn't exactly matter much though. |
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