This particular article was written by Menno Henselmans. Meno is owner and operator of Baysian Bodybuilding and has a lot of other informative articles on nutrition and training so be sure to check him out! I read this article a few weeks ago and couldn't decide if it was something I really agreed with. The science behind it is rock solid, that wasn't my problem. It was more about "this is awesome info, but pretty irresponsible" haha. I've decided to share his article because I CONTINUALLY get questions from EVERYONE about drinking and how it really affects their nutrition and training. Sometimes it's almost as if I'm catering to people's worries about drugs and alcohol more than training and nutrition at times. So before you go out and get sloshed on this beautiful Sunday-Funday afternoon, let me hit you with my own personal DISCLAIMER: Binge drinking is never safe, and if you're serious about maximizing your gains you should probably limit yourself to the Devil's nectar as much as possible. BUTTTT if you do happen to partake in activities that involve copious amounts of booze, utilize this powerful info in the article and NEVER drink and drive. Here ya go. The Science of Binge Drinking: 7 Tips to Get Wasted Without Wasting your Gains By Menno Henselmans Everything in life is better on drugs. Seriously. For every possible situation, from sex to studying for your finals, there’s a drug that will improve the experience. When it comes to nightlife, alcohol is the drug of choice because it’s legal, socially acceptable and easily available. In fact, alcohol is pretty much required on a night out. Alcohol doesn’t enhance parties. It creates them. All the messed up stuff that goes on at the average party is not for the sober of mind. Ask any bouncer. I’ve yet to meet a bouncer who hasn’t lost his faith in humanity. So, if you want friends (women) and sex (men), alcohol is your love potion. But it’s a toxic love potion. Now, this isn’t the type of article to recommend moderation. Screw moderation. You want to get hammered without ruining your physique. I understand. Even if you think your drinking style falls under the ‘moderate drinking’ category, you’re probably wrong. In science, moderate drinking is often defined as 2 drinks per day as a man or just 1 as a woman. Anything over that, especially in a time span of only a few hours, is binge drinking. Your body has a completely different reaction to 14 drinks in one evening compared to 2 drinks every day. The good news is that you can lose fat while binge drinking and you can minimize the damage to your training. To achieve this, we need to understand alcohol’s pharmacology. By the way, did you know that the ancient Greek word ‘pharmakon’ originally meant poisonbut in Modern Greek now means drug? Let’s look at how to fit alcohol into your macros. How to lose fat while drinking: The anti-beer belly diet When you drink alcohol, it is absorbed from your stomach and intestines. It then passes through your liver on its way to the blood. When it’s in your circulation, it keeps passing through your liver and during every passing your liver breaks down some of the alcohol into acetate. Acetate is what makes alcohol toxic. When acetate enters your blood, it inhibits fat burning throughout the body, not just in your liver [1]. As a result, most of the fatty acids in your blood are stored. This is why alcohol has such a high potential to make you fat. The upshot is that acetate is very hard to convert into fat itself and your liver is too busy breaking down the toxic acetate to contribute to the creation of new fat (known in science as de novo lipogenesis). As a result, your liver stores less than 5% of alcohol as fat [1]. Plus, alcohol itself has no fats and very few carbs (alcohol is a separate macronutrient). This means we can avoid the fat storing effect of alcohol by minimizing the amount of fatty acids in circulation.
But wait, can’t the body simply convert carbs or protein to fat? No, it actually can’t do this effectively unless you are in energy surplus [2]. Protein and especially carbs only considerably increase fat storage indirectly. They mainly increase the rate at which the fat you consume is stored instead of used as fuel. But since you’re not consuming much fat, there’s nothing to store. The carbs and protein are either used as fuel or stored. If they’re burned, good. Unfortunately, the protein is unlikely to be stored as muscle. Recent research shows that alcohol directly decreases muscle protein synthesis and anabolic gene expression [3]. Previous research had only demonstrated alcohol’s anti-anabolic effect in animals and alcoholics, but it has now been confirmed in strength training men. Only wishful thinkers would not have expected this, but still, it confirms that you want to keep your drinking and your training sessions separate. Since many people drink at night and the best time to work out for these people is often in the evening, it’s a good idea to train earlier on drinking days. If you always go out on a certain day of the week, like Saturday, try to make that a rest day in your program. It’s probably even better to train when hung over than before drinking, because recovery is more important than absolute performance for muscle hypertrophy.
You may have heard that alcohol improves your insulin sensitivity. Sure, when you drink less than 3 drinks per day. Any more and alcohol spikes insulin, disrupts glucose homeostasis, induces insulin resistance and over time greatly increases the chance that you’ll develop metabolic syndrome and type 2 diabetes [4-7]. But there’s light at the end of the tunnel. Since carbs can’t be converted to fat efficiently without overfeeding, carbs are ok to consume with alcohol. The key point here is to avoid being in an energy surplus. There is no point in bulking on alcohol anyway, because alcohol limits muscle protein synthesis and recovery from training. If you know it will be impossible to avoid an energy surplus because you’re going to drink a gallon or you have a festive dinner beforehand, it helps if you depleted glycogen stores beforehand. You’ll deplete liver glycogen and some muscle glycogen by 3 days of low-carb dieting or 2 days of severe caloric restriction. This will increase insulin sensitivity and stimulate your body to store carbs as glycogen instead of fat. [8]
Minimal Alcohol, Maximum Drunkenness Optimal nutrient timing on alcohol depends on your goal. Let’s first assume you simply drink alcohol because you like being drunk. We’ll consider the alternative afterwards. To get drunk with the most bang for your buck, you want all of the alcohol you drink to reach your blood. That way, you need the least amount of drinks to get drunk. This saves money and calories (more on that later) and it spares your body from having to deal with an excessive amount of alcohol. Let’s look at how to get drunk like a pro. Sipping & Chucking Your liver can break down only a certain amount of alcohol per hour, regardless of the amount that’s in your blood. Absorption from the digestive tract happens much faster. If you drink alcohol faster than your liver can metabolize it, the alcohol accumulates in your blood. This is shown in the graph below for 1 to 4 drinks. If you drink 1 drink per hour, you get the small spike of the lowest curve every hour. That won’t make you drunk, at least not if you can hold your liquor. You want to be on the upper curve, so it’s more efficient to take a few shots than to sip on beer the entire evening. Food has the same effect as sipping on your drinks. A full stomach slows the rate at which alcohol is absorbed into the blood [9-13]. This again slows down the accumulation of alcohol in your blood and makes you need more drinks to get drunk.
I could tell you to get new friends, but I am a consultant, not your father. Besides, a strong personality takes time to develop. Silverback gorillas don’t grow silver hairs on their back until they mature and only then can they lead instead of follow. In this scenario you can’t predict how much you’re going to drink. Once alcohol has cut your social brakes and people start shoving drinks in your hand, you probably won’t even be able to keep count. So, you want to minimize the effect of each drink so that the amount of alcohol you end up drinking does minimal damage. Maximal Alcohol, Minimum Damage To minimize the damage from a night out, you want to do the opposite of what you do when you want to get drunk. You want to spread your alcohol consumption over time as much as possible.
A good meal can thus make you consume over twice the amount of alcohol otherwise needed for the same level of intoxication. A meal basically cuts the damage from alcohol in half. The best meal is something that stimulates your liver and delays gastric emptying. That means protein, fiber and a high volume of food. Casein, egg white, fiber supplements and vegetables are therefore best.
Picking your Poison Alcohol, the actual macronutrient, contains 7.1 calories per gram. Sure, it has a high thermic effect which increases the cost of its metabolism by about 20%. In obese individuals, this is a huge increase in their metabolism. However, if you’re lean and physically active, that’s just a few percent more than the thermic effect of fat and carbs and it’s lower than that of protein. So it doesn’t make much sense to use net calories for alcohol if you don’t take into account the thermic effect of food for the rest of your diet as well [14-15]. Fortunately you can save a ton of calories by drinking only dry wines and spirits, possibly mixed with diet drinks. Spirits and lite beer have about a 100 calories per drink, wine has 125 and beer has 150. They all contain similar amounts of alcohol, protein (none) and fat (none). If you drink 20 beers on a night out on top of your regular diet, you consume nearly 3000extra calories. Chucking down 8 shots or so on an empty stomach as per the tips above will get you just as drunk and saves you almost 2200 calories. Sherry is the least caloric drink with only 75 calories per glass, whereas cocktails can run up to over 500 calories per glass. The table below with data from the US National Institute of Health shows you how many calories are in 1 regular serving of your favorite drinks.
The Alcohol Munchies The 3 regular macronutrients suppress your appetite in proportion to the amount of calories you consume of them. The more you eat of them, the more they fill you up. Alcohol doesn’t do this. In fact, alcohol can even increase your appetite. [16] Combined with reduced executive control AKA impaired judgment, it is easy to overeat when you’re drunk.
You don’t have to be a social recluse to build an awesome physique. Many of my non-competing clients regularly drink alcohol and still make great progress. Binge drinking isn’t healthy and it will somewhat compromise the development of your physique, but it makes for great experiences (if you remember them). An optimized diet isn’t just about maximum muscular hypertrophy and fat loss. It should be part of the lifestyle that makes you enjoy life to the fullest. If drinking is part of that for you, use these tips and drink up! References 1. De novo lipogenesis, lipid kinetics, and whole-body lipid balances in humans after acute alcohol consumption. Siler SQ, Neese RA, Hellerstein MK. Am J Clin Nutr. 1999 Nov;70(5):928-36. 2. De novo lipogenesis in humans: metabolic and regulatory aspects. Hellerstein MK. Eur J Clin Nutr. 1999 Apr;53 Suppl 1:S53-65. 3. Parr EB, Camera DM, Areta JL, Burke LM, Phillips SM, et al. (2014) Alcohol Ingestion Impairs Maximal Post-Exercise Rates of Myofibrillar Protein Synthesis following a Single Bout of Concurrent Training. PLoS ONE 9(2): e88384. 4. Garcia?Ruiz, C., & Fernandez?Checa, J. C. (2013). To binge or not to binge: Binge drinking disrupts glucose homeostasis by impairing hypothalamic but not liver insulin signaling. Hepatology, 57(6), 2535-2538. 5. Carlsson, S., Hammar, N., Grill, V., & Kaprio, J. (2003). Alcohol Consumption and the Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes A 20-year follow-up of the Finnish Twin Cohort Study. Diabetes Care, 26(10), 2785-2790. 6. Lindtner, C., Scherer, T., Zielinski, E., Filatova, N., Fasshauer, M., Tonks, N. K., … & Buettner, C. (2013). Binge drinking induces whole-body insulin resistance by impairing hypothalamic insulin action. Science translational medicine, 5(170), 170ra14-170ra14. 7. Heianza, Y., Arase, Y., Saito, K., Tsuji, H., Fujihara, K., Hsieh, S. D., … & Sone, H. (2013). Role of alcohol drinking pattern in type 2 diabetes in Japanese men: the Toranomon Hospital Health Management Center Study 11 (TOPICS 11). The American journal of clinical nutrition, 97(3), 561-568. 8. Jentjens, R., & Jeukendrup, A. E. (2003). Determinants of post-exercise glycogen synthesis during short-term recovery. Sports Medicine, 33(2), 117-144. 9. Jones AW, Jönsson KA, Kechagias S. Effect of high-fat, high-protein, and high-carbohydrate meals on the pharmacokinetics of a small dose of ethanol. Br J Clin Pharmacol. (1997) 10. Gentry RT. Effect of food on the pharmacokinetics of alcohol absorption. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. (2000) 11. Ramchandani VA, Kwo PY, Li TK. Effect of food and food composition on alcohol elimination rates in healthy men and women. J Clin Pharmacol. (2001) 12. Roine R. Interaction of prandial state and beverage concentration on alcohol absorption. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. (2000) 13. Sadler DW, Fox J. Intra-individual and inter-individual variation in breath alcohol pharmacokinetics: The effect of food on absorption. Sci Justice. (2011)14. Diet induced thermogenesis. Westerterp KR. Nutr Metab (Lond). 2004 Aug 18;1(1):5.15. de Jonge L, Bray GA. The thermic effect of food and obesity: a critical review. Obes Res. 1997;5:622–31.16. Yeomans, M. R. (2010). Alcohol, appetite and energy balance: is alcohol intake a risk factor for obesity?. Physiology & behavior, 100(1), 82-89. Like it? Share it!
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