Building Muscle and The Calorie Myth

job561

New Member
The following article was taken from a link connected to the latest AST mailing. The main crux of the article states that a person does NOT need to eat more calories to gain muscle mass.

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[b said:
Quote[/b] ]by Paul Delia
Founder and President, AST Sports Science

A big misconception in adding muscle mass is that you must consume above maintenance level calories to fuel the muscle growth. This is wrong and I believe it stems from “incomplete” thinking.

The human body is a very precise machine. You don’t just throw calories at it in hopes that some will stick in the form of new muscle mass. That’s a blind approach that will more likely lead to greater fat mass than actual muscle.

Your individual daily calorie maintenance level is the EXACT amount of calories your body requires to maintain all body functions including growth. All calories above your maintenance level WILL be stored as extra body fat. That’s the simple fact of the matter.

I can hear some of you now. “No, no, no. You need extra calorie to support the muscle growth.” Yes and no. Remember what I said, “Your individual daily calorie maintenance level is the EXACT amount of calories your body requires to maintain all body functions including growth.”

For a bodybuilder on anyone wanting to add lean muscle, the calories required to fuel this muscle growth on a daily basis is part of your daily calorie maintenance requirement. You see, in bodybuilding, you’re always trying to add lean muscle. When your body requires calories for muscle repair and growth, those calories are maintenance calories. You’re feeding your body what it requires to adapt and grow from the training you perform. Of course it’s more calories than if you were not trying to build muscle, but it’s an exact amount and not an excessive amount.

Your body in no way needs an excessive amount of calories for growth and repair. An excessive caloric intake, assuming the nutrients from these calories are constructive, will promote muscle growth, but every single extra calorie above what your body needs will be stored as fat.

So what’s the answer? The answer is simple; provide your body with the exact amount of calories it needs to support maximum muscle growth without exceeding your total caloric needs. Now I said the answer was simple, the execution is not so simple.

How do you know exactly how many calories you need? This is different for everyone. And it can change from day to day. You’ll need more calories on the days you train than on the days you don’t. However, very few people are going to measure their caloric expenditure and adjust their calories on a daily bases according to this expenditure. That’s reality.

Where to start . . .

A few years ago I developed the Nutritional Calculator to put you in a “caloric ballpark” based on gender, body type, age, and activity level. Plug in your parameters and you’ll get a caloric starting point, but more importantly you’ll get a nutrient breakdown of these calories that I have fine tuned over the years that are optimum for lean muscle growth.

Like I said, this is a “caloric ballpark.” In many cases it will be precisely the amount needed, in other cases these calories will need to adjusted either up or down depending on the individual.

If you need to adjust your calories I recommend adjusting 200 calories at a time. Don’t make big jumps in calories either way. What you are doing if fine tuning this number to arrive at your exact caloric need for maximum lean muscle growth without adding fat.

Adjusting your calories is easy and I have included a Nutrient Ratio Calculator so you can arrive at the optimized protein, carbohydrate and fat ratio with your adjusted calorie intake.

Take advantage of these important tools to create a perfect metabolic environment for muscle growth without the fear or uncertainty of adding extra body fat.

Am I alone in believing that this is merely wishfull thinking?
 
Its no new information. Its merely a name change!
eg we say 2500kcals is maintainance, so 3000Kcals is excess required for growth.
he says 3000kcals is 'maintainance' and thats all you need to grow on.
You still need 3000kcals to grow on.
Think about it. The aim of any weight lifter/BB is not to gain fat. If it were possible to eat just enough calories to gain muscle without putting on any fat, every one would be doing it!!! However, the reality is that it is extremely difficult to calculate exacty how much you need to grow on without putting on fat. So most just eat an excess and accept the fat gains that come (but they keep it in check also)
 
It's possible to add muscle while in calorie deficit. Just ask Andre ;)

It's a matter of degrees. Being above maintenance gives more.
It also gets real hard if your advanced and/or low bodyfat.

But ,in this case, like Stevie said, semantics!
 
This seems, to me, a little more than semantics. If it were true, wouldn't you want to expend a little (mental) effort "dialing in" caloric needs? For instance, assuming you could measure your BF accurately enough to detect small changes, you could use this feedback to adjust calories to just the right amount for lean growth but no more.

On the other hand, it seems Bryan doesn't believe it, as he has written about hormonal changes which result from high caloric intake.
 
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