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| Little Boy Who Likes To Dress Up! | Calf problem I've had this problem for abit now and it's getting no better. My calf's are feeling really tight, it hurts to walk, when getting up from being sat down, getting out of bed and even when i touch them, i've tried stretching them out, pain killers, all to no joy. Just wondering if any of you guys had any ideas? |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| Getting HUGE! Join Date: Feb 2006
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Calcium/Magnesium tab 1000mg/500mg take 2 tab 3X a day until pain subsided then take 1 tab every day. Also take 800IU of Vitamin E until pain subsides and then 400IU every day. Also take 3000mg of Vitamin C 3X a day until pain subsides, then 1000mg every day. This advice was given to me from a nutritionist that I highly respect. I use to get calf pain all the time. I don't now unless my ca/mg levels are low. I have strong calves. ![]() |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Getting HUGE! Join Date: Feb 2006
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | potassium too I forgot to mention check your potassium levels. I would think with a bodybuilder's diet that you would have enough potassium, so I didn't mention it, BUT.... just in case... Here is an excerpt from an article on training nutrition. Why does a shortage of potassium lead to muscle cramping? There could be 2 different effects of low K+ that could lead to cramps. First, K+ is involved in the repolarization of the muscle membrane during an action potential. If the K+ concentration is low within the cell, the driving force on K+ is lower, and the repolarization is slower. This will have no effect on the absolute refractory period of the action potential (the time when it is impossible to initiate another action potential), but the muscle cell will be more depolarized than usual following the absolute refractory period and thus closer to the AP threshold. The result may be that fewer action potentials are required to reach tetanus (maximal force resulting from temporal summation from multiple stimulation). The end result could be an overuse of ATP (at a fixed duration of neuromuscular stimulation) compared to the normal state, and thus a need to rely more heavily on anaerobic glycolysis to provide energy with its subsequent increase in lactate, and thus cramps. Secondly, there may be a K+-lactate symport (secondary facilitated diffusion mechanism) that removes lactate from the muscle cell. If such a transporter exists, low K+ levels would slow the removal of lactate from the muscle cell - resulting in cramps when excess lactate accumulated. There is no RDA for potassium, but the basic requirement is estimated to be around 2,000 mg for adults. Good dietary sources include oranges, bananas, apricots, avocados, potatoes, lean meats, dried peas and beans, coffee, tea, and cocoa. Deficiency can occur from dehydration, use of laxatives or diuretics, vomiting, or inadequate dietary sources. |
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| Getting HUGE! Join Date: Feb 2006
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | about Lactic acid New studies about lactic acid Practical Applications You’ve probably heard that lactic acid is a waste product that burns and shuts down muscles, and makes you sore a day or so later. It’s something athletes and fitness exercisers are urged to avoid. You’re told to work out just below your lactate threshold, where lactic acid begins to accumulate. That, it seems, is mostly wrong. Scientists have discovered that lactic acid is an important fuel; it’s central to carbohydrate metabolism. Unfortunately, if you don’t train properly, it can also impair performance. Your goal should be to burn lactic acid more effectively, not produce less of it. First, the idea that lactic acid causes soreness makes no sense, as Auburn University Professor L. Bruce Gladden explained to NYTimes health columnist Gina Kolata (May 16, 2006): “Lactic acid will be gone from your muscles within an hour of exercise. You get sore one to three days later. The time frame is not consistent, and the mechanisms have not been found.” After that, however, it gets a little more complicated. Let’s start with a simplified explanation of the process by which energy is supplied to the body. There are two primary energy systems: aerobic and anaerobic. Both systems burn carbohydrate in the form of glucose (blood sugar) and glycogen (muscle sugar). The main difference between the two systems is the presence of oxygen--and the end product. Moderate exercise is mostly aerobic, with oxygen; it’s clean burning, so there is no end product. When exercise becomes more intense and the aerobic system can’t provide enough oxygen, the anaerobic system kicks in to provide energy, without oxygen. The end product of anaerobic exercise is lactic acid. The two energy systems have been thought to operate as separate and distinct systems. Lactic acid was considered the enemy of aerobic metabolism, with the power in sufficient accumulations to bring it to a halt. Enter UC Berkley integrative biology professor George A. Brooks, who has been studying lactic acid since doing his doctoral dissertation on the subject in the ‘70s. Told by coaches when he was in college that running too hard would produce lactic acid and slow his performance, Brooks decided to investigate when he got to graduate school. The old lactic acid theory is based on an experiment performed on dissected frog legs. I remember hearing about it in biology class. After being subjected to electric shock, the frog legs contracted a few times and then stopped working. The motionless frog legs were found to be saturated with lactic acid. Voila! Lactic acid is bad; it brings muscles to a halt. “It was one of the classic mistakes in the history of science,” Brooks told Kolata. “I gave rats radioactive lactic acid, and I found that they burned it faster than anything else I could give them.” Dr. Brooks concluded that lactic acid is an important source of energy—and later research has proved him to be correct. “The understanding now is that muscle cells convert glucose to lactic acid,” Kolata explains. “The lactic acid is taken up and used as a fuel by mitochondria, the energy factories in muscle cells. Mitochondria even have a special transporter protein to move the substance into them.” As we will see below, aerobic metabolism and anaerobic metabolism operate side by side in the mitochondria. Thomas D. Fahey, Ed.D, Professor of Exercise Physiology at California State University at Chico, fills in more of the details on the new findings. “Dr. George Brooks describes the dynamic production and use of lactic acid in metabolism in his Lactate Shuttle Theory. This theory describes the central role of lactic acid in carbohydrate metabolism and its importance as a fuel,” Fahey explains. “The heart, slow-twitch muscle fibers, and breathing muscles [actually] prefer lactate as a fuel during exercise.” “The body converts glucose, a substance removed from the blood only sluggishly, to lactate, a substance removed and used rapidly,” Fahey continues. “[Moreover] using lactic acid as a carbohydrate middleman helps you [metabolize] carbohydrates from your diet, without increasing insulin or stimulating fat synthesis.” We’ll come back to Fahey on training. First, however, let’s look at the latest discovery concerning Dr. Brooks’ long postulated “intracellular lactate shuttle,” as summarized in a UC Berkley press release dated April 20, 2006. The Clincher “This experiment is the clincher, proving that lactate is the link between glycolytic (anaerobic) metabolism, which breaks down carbohydrates, and oxidative metabolism, which uses oxygen to break down various fuels,” Brooks said. Post-doctoral researcher Takeshi Hashimoto and staff research associate Rajaa Hussien made the actual discovery. (Forgive the technical jargon; you’ll get the idea.) The researchers located and labeled “three critical pieces of the lactate pathway: the lactate transporter protein; the enzyme which catalyzes the first step in the conversion of lactate into energy; and the protein complex where oxygen is used. Peering at skeletal muscle cells through a microscope, the two scientists saw these proteins sitting together inside the mitochondria, attached to the mitochondrial membrane, proving that the intracellular lactate shuttle is directly connected to the enzymes in the mitochondria that burn lactate with oxygen.” Brooks says that these finding “can help athletes and trainers design training regimens. Athletes may instinctively train in a way that builds up mitochondria, but if you never know the mechanism, you never know whether what you do is the right thing.” Training So lactic acid is a significant energy source, a good thing. How do we train to use more of it? Brooks gives us a powerful hint in the press release. Dr. Fahey provides more details. Gina Kolata also weighs in on the subject. It’s up to each person, however, to figure out what’s best based on their individual needs and goals. The hint from Brooks is obviously aimed at those of us interested in maximizing our potential: “The world’s best athletes stay competitive by interval training. The intense exercise generates big lactate loads, and the body adapts by building up mitochondria to clear lactic acid quickly. If you use it up [as an energy source], it doesn’t accumulate.” I’ve included hard intervals in my training for years. Looks like instincts were right on. (See The Aerobics Problem/Solution in Ripped 3.) What’s different is that I now have a better understanding how my body uses lactic acid. My job is to challenge my body to handle more of it. Gradually increasing the intensity of my intervals seems to be the best way to do that. (See our Aerobic Exercise category for articles on interval training, including 10, 11, 12, 30, 112 and 152.) Gina Kolata suggests more endurance training: “Running longer and longer distances, for example, increases the mass of [an athlete’s] muscle mitochondria, letting them burn more lactic acid and allowing the muscle to work harder and longer.” Almost as an afterthought she adds, “Just before a race, coaches often tell athletes to train very hard in brief spurts.” Fahey says, “Lactic acid formation and removal rates increase as you run, bike or swim faster. To improve your capacity to use lactate as a fuel, you must increase the lactic acid load very high during training.” Fahey warns, however, that too much lactic acid is still bad. “Lactic acid is a powerful organic acid, and its accumulation can cause distress and fatigue during exercise.” Professor Brooks concurs. “Overtraining,” he cautions in the press release, “can kill muscle cells.” Fahey recommends a combination of high intensity and endurance “to improve the capacity to use lactic acid as a fuel during exercise and recovery.” As indicated above, both forms of training increase and improve the mitochondria. Fahey says that high intensity training also develops cardiovascular capacity, and that endurance training also increases the use of fat as fuel. Increased cardiovascular capacity, of course, translates into improved blood flow and oxygen delivery to the muscles and other tissues. That means “you have less need to breakdown carbohydrate to lactic acid,” Fahey explains. Burning more fat as fuel has a similar function; “[it] decreases lactate formation and speeds its removal.” That leaves it to you to decide on the best combination of high intensity and endurance training to meets your needs. Marathoners and other endurance athletes will probably want to rely more on endurance training, while bodybuilders and strength athletes will likely favor interval training. Most of our readers are probably somewhere in between the two extremes. Wherever you fall on the endurance-strength continuum, remember that lactic acid is a fuel, not a poison. source:lactic acid Last edited by Peg; 26-06-2006 at 12:19 PM. |
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| Little Boy Who Likes To Dress Up! | Tht's one heck of a read Peg, thanks very much for tht. On a side note, i don't know if it's brought it on more then before, but i've started to use the ECA stack before a workout and it just seems funny tht it's started this problem again with my calf's, do u think it could of brought this problem up? |
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| | #7 (permalink) | |
| UK-Muscle Moderator Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Sunny Southern California U.S.A.
Posts: 24,337
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Quote:
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| | #9 (permalink) |
| Getting HUGE! Join Date: Feb 2006
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Might be good to go see your doctor. Is there any swelling or does the area feel hot to the touch? Any bruising? Are you following the directions for the stack to the letter? Are you hydrated? If it lasts more than 2 days after the vitamins I suggested, I'd see the doc. Diuretics do leech out the K/Ca/Mg and water. |
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| Little Boy Who Likes To Dress Up! | There's no swelling, isn't hot to touch, drink loads of water. I'll try the vit's you have said and take it from there. I've had the problem on and off for about a year now, but it's lasting longer then normal, normal it's tight for a few days and it goes for a month then comes back. |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Little Boy Who Likes To Dress Up! | i'm off to get the vit's tomorrow, the problem really started while wrestling i thought my boots were to tight, coz i lost feel in them, but my boots were lose. I can try and keep tabs on when it happens but this time of year it's hard, i can wrestle any were between 1day aweek to 7 days a week, for the next 9 plus weeks, o the joy of holiday camps, lol. |
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| | #13 (permalink) |
| Getting HUGE! Join Date: Feb 2006
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![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Myofascial trigger points are almost always the cause of pain in the lower legs, ankles and feet. They are tiny contraction knots in overworked or poorly conditioned muscles. Trigger points are shortened muscle fibers in hypersensitive areas of generally located in the middle of the muscle or at its attachments. A trigger point is a small knot or contraction in a muscle. This knot can usually be felt as a small as a pea or as big as a thumb. It is usually buried deep in the muscle. These trigger points can refer pain (make pain appear in) by shorten the overall length of the muscle and occur in areas far away from the actual pain site. Do you have any pain anywhere else? Numb in your boots is not good. Are they new boots? Are they tight around the heel? Does your heel hurt? You may simply be overworking the calf if your westling is increased so I might consider making your calf work light or at least cycling it. I'd not do calf work til the soreness was gone, you've taken the vitamins and then: while taking maintenance vitamins. 1st week light calf work 2nd week moderate 3rd intense 4th rest or whatever journal may dictate then 5th week moderate 6th week moderate 7th week intense 8th rest 9th week moderate 10th intense 11th intense 12 rest 13 back to regular intense calves work-out At any point there is pain reduce work to light or nothing and take vitamins for acute pain til pain stops and begin the cycle over again. I do hope you recover quickly. Apply heat and deep massage as well if you like. |
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| | #14 (permalink) |
| Little Boy Who Likes To Dress Up! | I've since changed my boots after getting the numb ness, which has helped abit, at the mo i only train my calfs as and when they feel gd, but i think it's time for a long rest and build them back up slowly. I've taken note of your plan of action and will be working it in when am gd to go. A big thank u to yourself for the help. |
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