| Literature DB >> 29910436 |
Lachlan Mitchell1, Daniel Hackett2, Janelle Gifford3, Frederico Estermann4, Helen O'Connor5,6.
Abstract
Competitive bodybuilders undergo strict dietary and training practices to achieve an extremely lean and muscular physique. The purpose of this study was to identify and describe different dietary strategies used by bodybuilders, their rationale, and the sources of information from which these strategies are gathered. In-depth interviews were conducted with seven experienced (10.4 ± 3.4 years bodybuilding experience), male, natural bodybuilders. Participants were asked about training, dietary and supplement practices, and information resources for bodybuilding strategies. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using qualitative content analysis. During the off-season, energy intake was higher and less restricted than during the in-season to aid in muscle hypertrophy. There was a focus on high protein intake with adequate carbohydrate to permit high training loads. To create an energy deficit and loss of fat mass, energy intake was gradually and progressively reduced during the in-season via a reduction in carbohydrate and fat intake. The rationale for weekly higher carbohydrate refeed days was to offset declines in metabolic rate and fatigue, while in the final "peak week" before competition, the reasoning for fluid and sodium manipulation and carbohydrate loading was to enhance the appearance of leanness and vascularity. Other bodybuilders, coaches and the internet were significant sources of information. Despite the common perception of extreme, non-evidence-based regimens, these bodybuilders reported predominantly using strategies which are recognized as evidence-based, developed over many years of experience. Additionally, novel strategies such as weekly refeed days to enhance fat loss, and sodium and fluid manipulation, warrant further investigation to evaluate their efficacy and safety.Entities:
Keywords: peak week; protein; refeed day; supplement
Year: 2017 PMID: 29910436 PMCID: PMC5969027 DOI: 10.3390/sports5040076
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4663
Individual participant characteristics of seven experienced male, natural bodybuilders participating in in-depth interviews.
| Participant | Age (Years) | Years of Bodybuilding | Number of Competitions | Competition Category | Level of Competition and Competition Success |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oliver | 43 | 8 | 15 | Masters; weight category | National (fourth place) |
| Luke | 40 | 17 | 15 | Opens; weight category | International (winner); Pro card |
| Kyle | 25 | 7 | 15 | Opens; weight category | International (winner); Pro card |
| Keith | 22 | 7 | 8 | Teenage; junior | National (winner) |
| Ben | 30 | 13 | 12 | Opens; weight category | National (fourth place) |
| Harry | 32 | 10 | 9 | Opens; weight category | State (winner); Pro card |
| Will | 65 | 11 | 26 | Grand masters; ultra-grand masters | International (winner) |
Masters, >40 years; Teenage, <19 years; Junior, 19–22 years; Grand masters, >50 years; Ultra-grand masters, >60 years.
Thematic summary of dietary practices and sources of dietary education, in seven experienced male, natural bodybuilders participating in in-depth interviews.
| Themes | Subthemes | Counts of Coded Text | Indicative Quotes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Off-season | Meals | 47 | “Lunch would be, again, probably a 200-g chicken breast, one cooked cup of brown rice and maybe about 100 g of green veggies… Meal four, which is afternoon tea, which, prior to gym, is exactly the same as the meal before, the lunch meal, so the chicken, rice, veggie one, then after gym, which would be dinner, would be usually a meat, a red meat, so a steak, maybe a 200 g, you know, rump steak, another cooked cup of brown rice and some veggies, and that’s dinner.” (Oliver) “I have a dose of protein and carbohydrate with each meal…for protein I usually cycle between a few different sources. I use whey protein, and then of course the one that is salmon, white flesh fish, kangaroo and beef, they’re going to be my primary, I’ll cycle between those different protein sources” (Keith) |
| Carbohydrates | 6 | “I dose my carbohydrate really high, because I want to make sure that my glucose metabolism is the best it possibly can be, because I will always diet on a high carbohydrate template to keep my training intensity high.” (Keith) | |
| Protein | 3 | “Anywhere from 2.2 to 2.9 g per kilo body weight. That’s not total lean mass but just my total body weight.” (Keith) | |
| Fat | 3 | “I will direct my fat anywhere from 0.5 to a maximum 1.2 g per kilo, so I keep my fats relatively moderate.” (Keith) | |
| Energy | 3 | “So I might sit at anywhere from, I used to sit at between 4500 and 5000 calories [per day] in my off-season.” (Keith) | |
| In-season | Meals | 34 | “Each meal, just to start cutting the calories a little bit. The egg yolks would go from the eggs at night, just down to egg white, just, again, to start cutting some calories, and they would slowly go down, so in four eggs would go only three yolks. And then a couple of weeks later it’ll be down to two yolks and then one yolk.” (Luke) |
| Carbohydrates | 16 | “The carb value will slowly come down. Around training, it’s going to remain quite high and in the morning it’s high-ish. But, yes, the carb value will slowly come down.” (Kyle) “Usually I make a drop, and I will either dig from fats, or carbs, or a combination of. I’m generally in favor of dropping carbohydrates initially and then digging into fats later,” (Keith) “I don’t have an issue with energy when I have my carbs around my training time, so pre-, intra- and post-workout is when I consume the majority of my carbohydrates through the day,” (Luke) “I will actually introduce more carbohydrate for fuel, you know, to fuel the requirement to get through, say, a 35-min interval session,” (Oliver) | |
| Protein | 7 | “I normally keep protein static. I’ll set it slightly higher than the off-season at the start of my prep and then just keep it the same throughout even if I lose weight. So if you were to look at it from a gram per kilogram basis, it would look like it’s going up, but it’s the same gram amount. So I’ll start at 225 g protein and just keep that throughout, so that will be roughly like 2.3, 2.4 g per kg,” (Harry) | |
| Fat | 7 | “I think I start with my fat probably around 25% [of energy] and then it might get as low as 15% to 20% at the end… So a day at the very end might be 40 g of fat.” (Harry) “So for example, I might start [the in-season] with my fat around 65 g [per day] and then that will only get decreased by maximum of 25 g while the carbohydrates can drop from, you know, 250 [g] at the start or 275 [g] all the way down to 100 [g] at the end on my low days,” (Harry) | |
| Energy | 15 | “So I probably start on average about 2400–2500 calories [per day] across the seven days, and I probably finish around 2000 or 1900 [per day] with probably a twofold increase in cardio.” (Harry) | |
| Refeed days | Refeed days | 32 | “I have one day that’s closer to my, like my off-season calories. So that might be like 2800 calories on a day predominantly increasing carbohydrate. That’s to kind of stimulate further losses to prevent some of the downgrades in my energy expenditure you could say, and to replenish glycogen, to feel mentally refreshed, to get a break in.” (Harry) |
| Peak week | Carbohydrate loading | 39 | “So normally, I will increase my carbohydrates early in the week, sometime around Tuesday or Wednesday for Saturday show, taper them back down but not all the way down where they were at the lowest low. So maybe 400 [g] for a day and then down to say 350 [g/d], 300 [g/d], 250 [g/d], and then on Friday and Saturday, the show, I will be closer to 300 or the 400 [g/d] range to kind of fill back out. So it’s basically kind of like a modified carb loading strategy an endurance athlete would use.” (Harry) “The idea is to, you know, wring out the sponge, I suppose, of the last stage of leaning out in those depletion days, and they would be paired with high volume gym work, and the theory behind it was, apparently, to swell the muscle belly, it’s not a vascular thing, it was actually just increased overall fullness of the muscle once you flooded it with carbohydrate.” (Oliver) “He felt I looked my best, you know, 24 h prior to the competition, so all these little things you’ve sort of got to take note of and you think, all right, I look this good now, it’ll be even better tomorrow, and in my case it wasn’t, and you think, well, maybe we just do a carb load of two days next time around instead of three, if that works perfectly for that timeframe.” (Oliver) |
| Water loading | 17 | “So then the water is still going in around about ten litres a day… then the water would start to, the water would start to cut back again as well and that was, sort of, you know, Thursday might still be up around about the ten litres, but then Friday and Saturday, Friday might cut down to around about four litres and then Saturday was two litres prior to, sort of, two o’clock or something like that… And then, you know, nothing, yes.” (Luke) “Muscle is 70% water and I’m not aware of any mechanism that tells the body to go after subcutaneous water. If you’re going to dehydrate, it’s going to be from everywhere and why are you pulling 70, you know, why are you pulling so much volume out of your muscles because you’re really wanting your muscles to be volumised?” (Will) “Those things don’t work for me,” (Ben) “A terrible, terrible thing to put your body through,” (Luke) | |
| Sodium manipulation | 12 | “So on the Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday would be salt in each meal, with probably around about two grams of salt, a gram, yes, one or two grams of salt with each meal, which was great, but then by Wednesday, oh man, you’ve just had this salty fishy chicken meal, it’s just absolutely disgusting and terrible. And then on the Thursday, Friday, Saturday, the salt would be dropped out.” (Luke) “It’s such a variable which can be really, really… Completely screw you up… Like, if you diet for 16 weeks and then the last two days you mess around with your sodium, and then you come on the stage bloated, it’s such a… It’s such a bummer.” (Kyle) | |
| Post-competition | Post-competition | 15 | “You kind of work yourself up into a frenzy,” (Ben) “It’s not so much hunger, it’s more so flavour. It’s more sort of like I want a pizza because I haven’t had it in months,” (Kyle) “We eat everything we haven’t eaten all year,” (Will) |
| Supplements | Protein powders | 23 | “I take, obviously, protein powders. I take WPI [whey protein isolate] just because it’s, you know, it’s fast to absorb, or whatever… And then obviously, yes, and then obviously casein at night.” (Kyle) |
| Creatine | 15 | “I don’t think I’ve stopped taking creatine monohydrate since 2004 to be honest.” (Harry) “The only thing I ever saw a result from was creatine. My wife would always say, ‘You’ve started using that creatine again, haven’t you?’ I’d say, ‘Why?’ She’d say, ‘Oh, you’ve got that swollen look about you, you know, that volumized look.’” (Will) | |
| Glutamine | 10 | “Glutamine is ten grams post-training in the off-season. Once I’m in diet mode for comp, especially the last four or five weeks, I up that to around about 40 g a day.” (Luke) “It’s supposed to help with your immune system and anticatabolic, so being on a lower calorie diet, I’m trying to stop muscle catabolism and glutamine is supposed to help out. And the last three times that I’ve dieted, I’ve, before that, the last four weeks I used to always get sick, always catch a cold or something. The last three times I’ve dieted, I’ve upped, had 40 g of glutamine a day for the last four or five weeks and I haven’t gotten sick.” (Luke) | |
| Preworkouts | 9 | “And it worked really well. It was, I was really focused in the gym… I just wanted to keep on training. I was just thinking about training, thinking about what I was doing at that time and was getting really into, into that workout.” (Luke) “I’m quite sensitive to caffeine by itself and I’ve had some of those preworkouts and not gotten to sleep until one or two o’clock in the morning and that’s having had it at 4:30 in the afternoon, five o’clock in the afternoon. So I’ve actually stayed away from those because of that.” (Luke) | |
| Sources of education | Other bodybuilders | 15 | “He’s just been competing for, I don’t know, like, a lot of years, so, yes. He kind of, he is the guy who I’ll run everything by him. If I have an idea, like, should I do this maybe with my, you know, carbs, or whatever, I’ll run it by him first and he’ll give the okay or he’ll say, maybe just try this.” (Kyle) “They might have good body parts and, you know, if you get your legs looking like that or your back looking like that and you see what sport they’ve come from or what type of training they do for that body part, but then again, it may just come down to a genetic predisposition for that particular body part.” (Luke) |
| Internet | 15 | “When I first got into it, I was not nearly as versed in the, I guess, the empirical evidence kind of way of thinking. I was reading posts online, bodybuilding.com forums. I was a regular on it.” (Harry) “Just Googling, you know, bodybuilding, you’ll get a… you will get some good information but you… they don’t necessarily know what is good and what’s bad.” (Harry) “The internet’s going to be everyone’s first port of call,” (Kyle) “The internet is littered with online gurus,” (Oliver) “It then just comes back to social media, and it’s the problem what I call the good-looking trainer. So the most popular ones with the most likes, whatever, let’s face it, they’re the good-looking blokes or the good-looking girls, most of which, unfortunately, don’t have that much between their ears but they have a huge following because most of their posts they’ve got their shirt off or they walk around in a bikini and everyone thinks they look great, so whatever they’re about to tell you must be good, rather than some rough-headed coach who’s in his 60s who’s done this sort of stuff all his life,” (Oliver) “He’s 17 years old and he’s following all these guys on Instagram and Facebook and things like that, and I don’t think they know. I’ve told him, ‘Mate, he’s not natural. Sure, have that as an attainable goal in your mind. If you fall short of that, you’re still going to be looking great.’ But I said, ‘Be under no illusion that that is natural,’ so I think a lot of the guys don’t know. They’re naive to it,” (Luke) | |
| Science and evidence-based sources | 7 | “I did very quickly gravitate towards more what I perceived to be more science-based and evidence-based approaches rather than just what were the big guys doing. To me, it was relatively intuitive that some genetic freak on a butt load of steroids and what worked for him would probably not be the same thing as what works for a more or less average bodybuilder who wasn’t going to be taking drugs.” (Harry) | |
| Coaches | 6 | “There’s not a whole lot of open information and sort of themes it’s just passed down from coaches in a tradition… I suppose I learn the majority of what I do through coaches and colleagues I worked with over time.” (Keith) “There are also a lot of 'coaches‘ out there who don’t, who are the same as them, you know. Most people, they compete in one or two shows and, you know, read a few magazine articles and they think they know how to be a coach. So the average coach is not a… the average coach doesn’t even have a bachelor degree to be honest.” (Harry) |
Figure 1Doughnut chart representation of the stages of bodybuilding preparation, including key dietary strategies used, as reported by seven male, competitive natural bodybuilders participating in in-depth interviews. Duration of stages are approximate and vary between bodybuilders.