At Large Nutrition's owner has stated on numerous occasions that HMB doesn't do anything on it's own, thus why he doesn't sell HMB by itself.
rather than continuing to post slanderous remarks like you just did, why don't you do some research yourself and report back here, thus be helpful and constructive here rather than an ass.
Actually, this is just a statement of fact. Slander, like libel, is a form of defamation - a falsehood that causes harm to the individual. Stating a truth, harmful or not, is not defamation: Mr. Mason has suggested that the HMB may have no effect on its own - in fact, it is why At Large does not sell HMB on its own:
One point being sorely missed by the "twits" is that HMB is part of a total formula which makes said formula better. As someone who formulates products, I think it incumbent upon me to create the best product I can within reasonable cost parameters. That is EXACTLY why I included HMB. You will note that I do not offer HMB by itself.
First, some background: nni had earlier posted a brief analysis of some of the articles Chris Mason posted up in support of HMB's inclusion in Results:
Effects of beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbutyrate on aer...[Int J Sport Nutr Exerc Metab. 2007] - PubMed Result
Regarding body composition, there were no significant differences.
Effects of six weeks of beta-hydroxy-beta-methylbu...[J Strength Cond Res. 2007] - PubMed Result
HMB and HMBCr were concluded to have no ergogenic effect on muscular strength and endurance, leg power, or anthropometry when taken orally by highly trained male athletes over 6 weeks.
I posted what I did to show an alternative to your opinion.
Next, you are entitled to your opinion, but that does not preclude the fact RESULTS works exceptionally well and HMB is an integral component in the product.
<snip>
It would be ignorant to assume that HMB would have the same effects independently as it does in the context I have referenced.
Chris Mason's argument hinges upon his assertion that HMB works differently - better - when combined with the other ingredients in his product (80g of sugar, 5g creatine monohydrate, 3.5g beta alanine, 3g HMB) than HMB does alone.
This is what is called an interaction. Chris Mason is suggesting that HMB may work by itself, or it may not - but that when combined with the other ingredients in Results, it adds value.
For example, suppose the following:
3g of HMB on its own increases some performance metric by A%
(where A is greater than or equal to zero)
80g of dextrose, 5g of creatine and 3.5g of B-A increase said metric by B%
(where B is greater than zero, without a doubt. Creatine's worth has been established, creatine does indeed work better with dextrose, B-A has measureable benefit)
Chris Mason's assertion is that the combination of 80g dextrose, 5g of creatine and 3.5g of B-A, when consumed with 3g of HMB, increases the performance metric by something larger than (A+B)%
Note that this is what "positive interaction" means.
The problem with this assertion is that there is no known mechanism through which this synergy could exist:
the second study is with creatine, and through the mechanisms in which creatine, beta alanine and hmb work there really is no synergy. creatine is effective as is beta alanine, as are carbs. there is synergy between carbs and creatine, but the others work on their own. point is if a study shows hmb doesnt work on its own, adding the above isnt going to change that imo. but, take out the hmb and half the carbs and results looks good to me, add in 7grams of eaa's and i would make it a staple.
...whether or not HMB works by itself is something that is open to argument based upon various studies. I feel that it does, but could agree to disagree on that point. Now, IF you were correct and it did not work by itself that in no way indicates what it would do in concert with other ingredients and to make assumptions about it, especially when they fly in the face of empirical evidence, is just poor science.
Chris
Summarizing, Chris Mason believes that HMB, even if it has no effect on its own in trained athletes, has a positive effect on these individuals when consumed as part of the Results cocktail. Problem is, there is no scientific evidence that this is possible.
From what I've read, there are exactly two possibilities here:
- HMB has little or no ergogenic benefit to trained athletes, and therefore adds no value when 3 grams of it are consumed with 80g of dextrose, 5g of creatine and 3.5g of B-A
- HMB has a positive effect on these individuals on its own, and this value is additive upon the ergogenic benefits of consuming 80g of dextrose, 5g of creatine and 3.5g of B-A
Chris is suggesting a third possibility:
3. Even if HMB is of little or no benefit to trained athletes, it adds value when 3g of HMB are consumed with 80g of dextrose, 5g of creatine and 3.5g of B-A.
There is no evidence of this. The mechanisms through which this could happen don't exist. This was brought up by nni:
im not worried about losing face, and feel confident in what i have offered. hmb is not new, it is not a giant mystery to understand how it works, and the other ingredients are not new. they work on their own towards a common goal, but no research has shown that creatine enhances BA, or ba enhances hmb etc...
Mr. Mason responded that there is evidence of HMB's additive effect with the dextrose, creatine and B-A:
Oh, and I forgot to mention you assertation about no research showing BA and creatine, or HMB and creatine having additive effects exists is wrong. There IS research which shows exactly that.
If HMB has an effect, its effect WOULD be additive since there is no known mechanism through which its effect could be interactive with dextrose, creatine and B-A, a point brought up by nni earlier and which is borne out in the research.
So it all comes down to this:
- Either HMB has an effect that is good enough ON ITS OWN to be worth being the most expensive part of Results,
- or it doesn't.
Discuss...