dave 236
Elite Member
sorry missed the quote. now perfectly stated lolI studied nutrition at UF. The curriculum is based on guidelines set by various organizations (FDA etc.). The professors teach the guidelines. Your professors are experts in anatomy, physiology, metabolism, and can tell you everything about beta oxidation and actin/myosin --- they just don't have the knowledge to apply that information towards muscle gain or fat loss, in practice.
No curriculum in any capacity will cover too much about superphysiological doses/illicit use of steroids. Bodybuilding is not what the steroids are produced for.
Coincidentally, I've looked over the curriculum at UM's Miller Med School and they don't cover anything about diet or nutrition. Doctors, as a profession, don't know anything about diet or training. Neither do physiologists or dieticians. Having an expert knowledge of origins/insertions and metabolism cannot be parlayed into knowledge of fat loss or muscle gain. Having the formal education does allow one to understand the peer-reviewed studies as well as understand the mechanisms of diet and training.
It's not that your professors are wrong per se, it's just that you would be well served to take all of their diet and training advice with a grain of salt.