An Interview with Lyle McDonald, Part II
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Lyle McDonald |
Lyle McDonald is a physiologist and author who has spent over a decade obsessively finding ways to apply cutting-edge scientific research to sports nutrition, fat loss and muscle growth.
An Interview with Lyle McDonald, Part I
Q. Most of the questions I get are from people who want to gain muscle
and lose fat at the same time. Can you explain why it's so difficult to lose
fat and gain muscle simultaneously, if there are any exceptions to the rule,
and what you recommend instead?
A. Well, it's actually quite easy to gain muscle while losing fat if you are
either
a. a fat beginner
b. coming back from a layoff and regaining lost muscle
c. willing to take the right drugs
Unfortunately, if you're not in that group it tends to be very difficult to
do both to any significant degree at once, claims in the muscle magazines not
withstanding. The fundamental issue is that the requirements for optimal muscle
growth (in terms of hormones, nutrient intake, and cellular metabolism) are
diametrically opposed to what's optimal for fat loss.
Simplistically, muscle growth requires
a caloric and nutrient surplus and a cellular metabolism oriented towards
tissue building; fat loss requires at least a caloric deficit, a certain hormonal
profile, and a cellular metabolism oriented towards breakdown. And, outside
of one of the three situations mentioned above, you can't do both.
So the typical suggestion is to either focus on one or the other and alternate
cycles. In general, I think this is good advice. Spend 6-8 weeks in a slight
caloric surplus while training your brains out and gain some amount of muscle
and fat. Now diet for 6-8 weeks and take the fat off while keeping the muscle.
Do this in an alternating fashion over a year or two and you end
up bigger and leaner.
Of course, not everybody is happy with that, and nobody likes gaining fat.
So what's the solution? One of them is my Ultimate
Diet 2.0. An update of the
original Ultimate Diet by Dan Duchaine and Michael Zumpano over 20 years ago,
it couples a short (3.5-4 day) diet phase with a short anabolic phase.
By doing
a lot of interesting things with diet and training, it allows you to lose
fat during the diet phase and put those calories back into muscle during the
overfeeding phase. I've had people use it to consistently lose 1-1.5 pounds
of fat with zero muscle loss as well as to 'clean bulk,' which
means gaining
muscle gradually with almost no fat gain. It's not the easiest system in the
world, mind you, but it does work.
Q. Your UD 2.0 book
sounds very interesting. Can you give us a basic outline of what the program
contains?
A. As I mentioned above, it couples a short diet phase, where the goal is
maximal fat loss, with an anabolic phase, where the goal is muscle building.
So in the fat loss phase, you're on low-calories and low-carbohydrate along
with depletion workouts to deplete glycogen.
This is all set up to maximize fat loss in terms of mobilization and burning.
Then, around day 4, you start
to make the shift back into anabolism. A small carbohydrate-based meal precedes
a tension workout (sets of 6-8 repetitions)
which leads you into carbohydrate-loading. On Saturday, fully carbed up and
anabolic, you do a power workout (sets of 3-5 repetitions) to impose a growth
stimulus on your primed muscles. You recover Saturday and Sunday and repeat
it.
Of course, there are many more details about what and how much to eat and
the specifics of how to exercise than
that but that's an outline of it. Readers will also learn all about fat loss,
muscle growth and calorie partitioning (what determines where the calories
go or come from when you overeat or diet) even if they don't actually use the
system.
Q. Although you're probably best known in the industry for your diet books,
you also have a massive amount of knowledge and experience in other areas,
particularly strength training. One subject I think readers might be interested
in is the hormonal response to exercise. Many people are told to keep
the length of their workouts down to 45 minutes or less on the basis that
testosterone levels drop and cortisol levels rise after this point. Is this
good advice or not?
A. This is going to be another one of those yes and no types of answers.
On the one hand, the idea that testosterone drops after 45 minutes is one
of those ideas that falls into the "If you repeat something enough times,
it will become accepted dogma."
The idea supposedly came from Bulgarian
Olympic lifting coach Ivan Abadjaev who claimed that androgen levels dropped
after 30-40 minutes and who pioneered the idea of keeping his athletes in
the gym all damn day by having them train for 30 minutes, rest 30 minutes,
train again, etc.
As time has passed, it's come out that the main impetus behind his training
schedule had more to do with controlling his athletes, simply exhausting them
every day to keep them from partying and staying up late.
Just keep them in
the gym for 12 hours per day by breaking training up into lots of tiny segments
(this probably also allowed them to train intensely at each session) and
they go home and sleep when training is over. Bulgaria,
under new coaching has moved to a much more traditional system of training
with 2-hour workouts as the norm.
As well, what I've seen of American research has never supported the idea
of a drop in testosterone, and you can find plenty of successful athletes who
spend far more time than that in the gym. Powerlifters, who are often taking
very long rests between sets and having to muck with gear are often training
2-3 hours at a stretch.
This isn't to say that the idea of keeping your workouts high quality is
a bad one. Certainly, I think that most bodybuilders spend too much unproductive
time in the weight room doing too many sets of too many unnecessary exercises.
For the natural athlete, quality should predominate over quantity for sure.
But I think setting some arbitrary time limit like 45 or 60 minutes is missing
the point. Basically, I think the idea may be useful as sort of a check to
keep people from wasting energy and time doing endless sets of useless exercises
in the gym, but I don't think it's an absolute. When I train people, I'd say
60-90 minutes is about average. Much more than that and quality falls off too
much.
Certainly, shorter workouts tend to be higher quality. By the end of a 2-hour
workout, you're unlikely to be putting much effort into things. There is also
the issue of crashing blood glucose and a potential increase in cortisol because
of it.
That can readily be
ameliorated
by sipping a carbohydrate or carbohydrate
plus protein drink during training. That will keep insulin higher and keep
cortisol down during extended training sessions. It may also help to improve
intensity.
Q. What about supplements? Which ones do you think are the 'essentials' that
most people should be using?
A. The single most essential supplement in my book would have to be preformed
fish oils (EPA/DHA, the two key long-chain omega-3 fatty acids). It's not an
over-exaggeration to say that they do everything and are almost totally insufficient
in our modern diet. Six 1-gram capsules per day (and I prefer this to flax
oil) should be mandatory. Honestly, this should be considered a food anyhow.
After that, I'd probably say a good basic multi-vitamin/mineral. Doesn't even
have to be an expensive one, I use the supermarket generic and just take two
per day, one morning and evening with food.
I don't consider protein powder essential but it can be convenient when
used around workouts.
Beyond that, I don't think there is much that is essential. Women should probably
worry about calcium and iron status, especially if they don't eat dairy or
red meat respectively. Most of the sports supplements are bogus in my opinion
and you can get big or lean without any of them.
For dieting, although not essential, the ephedrine/caffeine stack is still
probably the single best product out there. Two decades of data, it works,
and it's safe unless you take it like a moron.
Q. Are there any tricks you have for women who want to lose the last bit
of 'stubborn' fat? Do they need to do things significantly differently to
men?
A. Women's hip and thigh fat has been a perennial problem as it tends to be
the most stubborn of all bodyfat to lose. Men's abdominal fat, although many
men will disagree with me here, is relatively easy: men mainly need to be more
patient and the abdominal fat will come off.
In contrast, hip and thigh fat is very difficult to mobilize and burn off.
This is why you get women with absolutely ripped upper bodies who are still
carrying significant fat in their lower bodies.
The reason is clearly evolutionary, women's hip and thigh fat exists to support
pregnancy and milk production. Quite in fact, during lactation, women's hip
and thigh fat becomes the easiest to mobilize but I haven't figured out a good
way to take advantage of this...yet.
There are a number of reasons for the stubbornness of women's body fat, not
the least of which is poor blood flow. If a woman feels her hip and thigh fat,
she'll tend to notice that it's colder than other parts of her body; this is
due to poor blood flow.
It turns out that aerobic activity can overcome this
limitation; women tend to need more cardio than men to come in ripped (many
men can get ripped on nothing but lifting and calorie restriction). But even
regular cardio doesn't solve the problem.
Other reasons include the type of fat that is stored there and the fact that
stubborn body fat is more resistant to fat mobilizing stimuli.
Dan Duchaine was probably the first to come up with a solution
and that was oral yohimbe. Falsely touted as a testosterone booster, yohimbe
blocks the receptor on fat cells (called an alpha-adrenoreceptor) that makes
fat mobilization so difficult. Regular use of oral yohimbe with caffeine prior
to morning fasted cardio can have a noticeable effect on women's fat loss.
As I discuss in the Ultimate
Diet 2.0, it turns out that low-carbohydrate diets
(20% or less calories from carbohydrate for
3-4 days) tends to automatically inhibit those same alpha-adrenoreceptors.
The third and fourth day of the UD2 are good for mobilizing and burning off
stubborn body fat.
Q. Thanks for the interview Lyle!
A. Thanks for having me Christian.
Books by Lyle McDonald
The Rapid Fat Loss Handbook (e-book) 
Maybe you need to drop weight fast for a special event, like a class reunion or a wedding. Perhaps you want to look good in a bathing suit and didn't start your diet and exercise program early enough... or you might just want to get your diet over as quickly as possible. If so, the Rapid Fat Loss Handbook will reveal the fastest, most effective way to shed both weight and fat in the shortest time possible. Now includes FREE home exercise program and easy-to-use online diet calculator.
The Protein Book covers everything you need to know about protein and muscle growth, fat loss and athletic performance. Referencing over 500 scientific studies, the book is the ultimate reference on all aspects of optimal protein nutrition for anyone who's serious about building a better body.
The Ultimate Diet 2.0 (UD2)
The UD2 is possibly the most comprehensive and complete guide to losing stubborn body fat ever written. Inside, you'll discover the secrets of calorie partitioning, how to control where the calories go when you overeat, and where they come from when you diet... the hidden metabolic advantages that elite athletes have, and how to duplicate them to improve your results... why stubborn fat is so stubborn and how to get rid of it... how muscle grows and why so many different training systems can all be right... and much, much more!
A Guide to Flexible Dieting
A Guide to Flexible Dieting reveals how being less strict with your diet can actually make it work better. You'll discover how deliberately breaking your diet (in a controlled fashion) can make it work better in the long run. Free meals, structured re-feeds and even a full diet break are all discussed and explained in detail.
The Ketogenic Diet
The Ketogenic Diet is the first and only book to examine in-depth the scientific evidence regarding low-carbohydrate and ketogenic diets. At 325 pages and containing over 600 scientific references, this will be your complete reference for ketogenic diets. It's unlike any other book on low-carbohydrate diets that you have ever read or seen.
Bromocriptine: An Old Drug with New Uses
The problem of getting very lean or simply losing fat and keeping it off is not a new one. New research is finally explaining the reasons and physiology behind dieting failure and it turns out that many of the problems are in your brain. Bromocriptine: An Old Drug with New Uses explains the physiological reasons behind dieting failures, along with discussing a potential fix: a very old drug called Bromocriptine.
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