Some of you old farts may have seen this artical before, it's solid info.
Over-40 Muscle-and-Health Diet
By: Jerry Brainium
One of the great things about bodybuilding is that it's never too late to begin. Recent studies show that while the majority of sports have physiology-based age limitations, you can build and maintain muscle with advancing age. That's not to say that adding muscle isn't easier when you're young. Those who train in their 20s or younger are at a distinct advantage when it comes to bodybuilding progress. They have a more potent release of anabolic hormones, more complete and rapid recovery from workouts and the ability to get stronger with less chance of injury. Those advantages may lead you to conclude that bodybuilding should be left to the young, but nothing could be further from the truth. The real advantages of lifting weights occur as you age. While the search for the fountain of youth continues, most scientists agree that the closest things to it are exercise and diet. The human body operates on a 'use it or lose it' principle. Aging people who don't present themselves with mental challenges often wind up with the more serious cases of mental degeneration. Those who don't exercise their muscles may lose their ability to move.
The body can tolerate an impressive degree of insult, such as lack of exercise and poor diet, until about age 40. That's when all the physical and mental neglect begins to surface. Those who are out of shape at 40 often say they feel older than their chronological age. The reverse is true for those who engage in judicious exercise and diet. For them the aging process seems to slow to a crawl.
A key aspect of maintaining fitness and health with the passing years is optimal nutrition. The same principles that apply when you're young also apply when you're middle-aged or older. You still need to eat all required nutrients and avoid foods that promote disease and degeneration. If you ask scientists who study aging about the best nutritional technique for delaying the aging process, many will tell you calorie restriction. That's proved effective in a number of animal species, where reducing calories led to a slowed rate of aging and protection against most diseases associated with aging, including cardiovascular disease and cancer. The experts usually advise reducing daily calories by 30 percent or more.
Despite the apparent success of calorie restriction in animals, there's little evidence that such a stringent eating plan works in human beings. The first hurdle is that curbing calories to the extent demanded by a typical low-calorie plan is apt to lead to long-term failure, or what medical pros call lack of compliance, in all but the most highly motivated dieters. On the other hand, proponents of calorie restriction bristle when it's called a starvation diet, noting that while calories are restricted, nutrients are not. Reducing required nutrients along with calories would lead to a shorter life span.
From an exercise and bodybuilding perspective, restricted-calorie dieting is a negative. That's readily apparent when you take a look at those who have opted for the calorie-restriction lifestyle. Without exception, they appear catabolic and painfully thin. One proud proponent of the calorie-restriction system flexes his arm in a Web site photo, evidently unaware that his biceps resembles a pea on a plate.
Some aspects of calorie restriction that are said to help delay the aging process aren't suitable to successful muscle building at any age. Restricting calories can decrease anabolic hormones, except maybe growth hormone'but GH alone isn't associated with muscle size. Prolonged calorie restriction usually elevates cortisol, the primary catabolic hormone, and you don't get enough protein and fat to support anabolic hormone function and muscular growth.
Recent studies show that the life-span-related benefits of calorie restriction accrue from decreased cellular oxidation, especially in the mitochondria, a part of the cell that produces energy. The other beneficial aspect is less bodyfat, which leads to less whole-body inflammation. That's noteworthy because most degenerative diseases of aging have an inflammatory component. Far from being the passive tissue it was thought to be in the past, bodyfat acts like an endocrine organ, releasing numerous substances that have potent effects on health and longevity. So the less bodyfat you have, the greater your chances of living to an advanced age.
If you're over 40 and want to build or keep your muscle, your primary focus should be on maintaining health and preventing diseases that start in the middle years. That's clearly what differentiates older bodybuilders from their younger peers. The young often show little concern for preventing disease. At the height of their physical prowess, they frequently turn a blind eye toward the future. All that changes when you turn 40. Even if you choose to ignore the effects of aging, they'll soon become apparent.
Good nutrition, however, can diminish or even slow many of the effects associated with aging. That's why you need to know how to eat to maintain and build muscle, as well as provide a hedge against the physical and mental degeneration that would otherwise inevitably ensue. Start by taking stock of your present condition and setting your goals from that perspective. For example, if you have a close family member who has type 2 diabetes, your diet plan should focus on reducing bodyfat and getting nutrients that will promote insulin sensitivity, including chromium, biotin and most other vitamins and minerals. You should avoid processed carbs and other simple sugars and focus on low-glycemic- index carbs that elicit the least release of insulin.
An exception to that rule would be the intake of high-glycemic carbs just after a workout. Research shows that taking in a carb-protein ratio of about 3-to-1 just after a workout heightens insulin release, which promotes anabolic action in muscle. The greater insulin release not only stimulates amino acid uptake in muscle for increased muscle protein synthesis but also activates the rate-limiting enzyme for muscle glycogen replenishment, which aids workout recovery considerably.