The World's First Natural Cortisol-Control Compound
- Anti-Catabolic
- Glutamine Peptide
- Phosphatidylserine
- All-Natural Cortisol Control
Many top researchers believe that intense exercise causes a severe rise in
cortisol levels. This increase in cortisol, a powerful catabolic hormone,
can impede muscle growth. Elevated cortisol breaks down muscle and blocks
protein synthesis while slowing glucose utilization. Cort-Bloc suppresses
cortisol production and prevents muscle- tissue cannibalization.
Cort-Bloc is the first supplement medically proven to suppress workout- related
cortisol. Lowered cortisol levels enable greater amino acid uptake for enhanced
nitrogen retention, accelerated glucose utilization/glycogen synthesis, and
increased protein synthesis.
In recent clinical studies when phosphatidylserine (herein referred to as
PS), the primary active ingredient found in Cort-Bloc, was administered to
strength athletes, cortisol levels were reduced by almost 30%! This can result
in more productive workouts and growth.
In one study PS promoted a marked reversal of many symptoms associated with
depression. PS also stimulated dramatic improvements in memory and retention
of information.
PS is a natural substance found in cell membranes in the brain, specifically
in the cerebral cortex neuronal membrane. It can act as an antioxidant and
in doing so may enhance longevity.
Benefits
Highly effective cortisol antagonist
Enhances nitrogen retention
Greater amino acid uptake
Helps maximize muscle growth
Reduces stress reactions
Greater rate of recovery
Boosts immunity
Enhances longevity
Can reverse the symptoms of depression
Can boost protein synthesis by blocking stress hormones
Hormonal Wars
by Jerry Brainum [January '98 IRONMAN]
While you may not be aware of it, a struggle for biochemical domination is
occurring within you. The victor of this war ultimately determines whether
you make muscular gains or lose muscle and even get fat. The two combating
armies are collectively called anabolic and catabolic hormones. The most
familiar of them from a bodybuilding perspective are testosterone (anabolic),
growth hormone (anabolic), insulin (anabolic) and cortisol (catabolic).
Anabolic refers to the metabolic building processes. The actions of anabolic
hormones involve either an increase in muscle protein synthesis or a decreased
breakdown of muscle protein. Increased breakdown of muscle is the chief characteristic
of catabolic reactions. You would think that since cortisol, the body's primary
catabolic hormone, is so outnumbered by the anabolic forces, it would be
more or less an ineffectual player in the hormonal battle between anabolic
and catabolic reactions, but that isn't the case.
Since cortisol, a product of the adrenal gland cortex, is a primary stress
hormone, it's activated by any type of stress the higher brain centers that
govern its release perceive. Since stress is ubiquitous, the body is constantly
secreting cortisol, with peaks in the early morning hours and a low during
the initial stages of deep sleep.
While cortisol has gotten a bad reputation among bodybuilders due to its
potent catabolic activity and tendency to promote bodyfat accretion, the
fact remains that it's also essential to life. During stress reactions it's
the first line of defense in, among other functions, maintaining energy levels
and blood pressure. While such reactions can be lifesaving under certain
circumstances, when you're resting or after you exercise, the results are
hardly desirable. They include muscle loss, mineral excretion, sodium retention
and other enemies of the bodybuilding progress.
For natural bodybuilders, meaning people who eschew all forms of pharmaceutical
bodybuilding assistance, controlling cortisol is vital for muscle gains.
Note the use of the word controlling. You don't want to totally eliminate
cortisol activity in your body, as that would be a life-threatening condition.
The key is to control the catabolic reactions induced by cortisol while emphasizing
the anabolic processes that promote increased muscle growth. You do that
by upping your body's production of the endogenous anabolic hormones mentioned
above by both following a sensible training program and using certain specific
nutritional substances and diet techniques.
Let's get one thing straight, however. No natural food or supplement can
match the power of drugs such as anabolic steroids. Such steroids promote
muscle gains through two primary mechanisms: 1) increased muscle protein
synthesis and 2) decreased catabolic reactions in muscle. The first mechanism
involves a genetic alteration of certain protein synthesizing enzymes that
simply can't be duplicated by any known food supplement; however, the second
process, anticatabolism, can be manipulated without drugs.
Research concerning the mechanisms of anabolic steroids shows that most of
their effects come from their anticatabolic activity. The upgraded protein
synthesis is relatively ephemeral, lasting only a few weeks at best. After
that it's all anticatabolic, as the steroids somehow counteract the actions
of cortisol in muscle.
Exactly how they accomplish this anticatabolic activity is still subject
to debate. While some people say that steroids block cellular cortisol receptors
in a manner similar to the way another drug, Nolvadex, blocks estrogen cell
receptors, that doesn't add up. For one thing, muscle tissue contains at
least 50 times more cortisol receptors than androgen receptors, the receptors
anabolic steroids interact with. A more plausible explanation is that such
steroids can interfere with cortisol activity in muscle, most likely at the
gene level.
How Cortisol Breaks Down Muscle
Understanding cortisol's catabolic activity in muscle provides some insight
into the way certain food supplements may help spare muscle by inhibiting
it. Cortisol is known to reduce body protein stores in all tissues except
for the liver. It does that through several mechanisms, including a reduction
in the synthesis of cellular RNA, which is essential for protein synthesis.
Since anabolic steroids promote muscle protein synthesis by increasing RNA,
cortisol has exactly the opposite effect.
Cortisol mobilizes amino acids from muscle for transport to the liver, where
they undergo a process called gluconeogenesis that results in increased glucose
production. While this is vital for a rapid source of energy during severe
stress, it also results in muscle breakdown. Insulin opposes cortisol in
the action, but high stress activity promotes cortisol domination over insulin.
Recent studies show that consuming carbohydrates and protein immediately
following a workout both increases insulin release and potently blunts cortisol.
The dosage of carbs required for this effect is one gram per kilogram (2.2
pounds) of bodyweight taken immediately after training and again one hour
later. In addition, including at least 50 grams of protein helps maximize
insulin release.
Cortisol appears to promote the synthesis of a protein-degrading substance
called ubiquitin that rapidly breaks down muscle. Interestingly, a drug called
clenbuterol that's favored by some bodybuilders may work by inhibiting ubiquitin
synthesis in muscle, thereby exerting an anticatabolic effect. Other hormones,
such as growth hormone and insulinlike growth factor 1 (IGF-1), appear to
inhibit the ubiquitin system as well.
Cortisol also works by stimulating the exit of the amino acid glutamine from
muscle. When that occurs, rapid muscle catabolism follows. Several studies
show that taking supplemental glutamine may block much of the catabolic effects
of cortisol in muscle. The problem is, many of the studies that show an anticatabolic
effect of glutamine used intravenous solutions containing a stable dipeptide...up
to 40 grams of glutamine in a complex with another amino acid, alanine.
If you attempted to take that quantity of glutamine orally, most of it would
not reach your blood or muscle. Intestinal cells, which are replaced about
every three days as they slough off during the process of food movement through
the gut, use glutamine as fuel. When you take it orally, about 85 percent
of a dose of glutamine goes to the intestinal cells. Even if it were somehow
to survive the intestinal hijacking, the liver has enzymes just waiting to
degrade the rest of it.
Nevertheless, a study conducted about two years ago showed that as little
as two grams of oral glutamine significantly increased growth hormone release.
That alone would give you an anticatabolic effect, since growth hormone opposes
the actions of cortisol in muscle. In fact, studies indicate that decreasing
cortisol release in the body results in an upgraded growth hormone response.
Some preliminary studies show that vitamin C may also inhibit the catabolic
actions of cortisol; however, the evidence is not particularly impressive.
More likely, substances like branched-chain amino acids and even dietary
fat are the nutritional cortisol inhibitors.
A new study reported at the 1997 meeting of the American College of Sports
Medicine found that one of the branched-chain amino acids, leucine, successfully
reduced the catabolic effects of cortisol in rat muscle without affecting
muscle glutamine levels. That's interesting because past studies showed that
BCAAs work by either increasing muscle glutamine synthesis or preventing
its release under the influence of cortisol.
Another study, reported at the Experimental Biology 97 meeting in New Orleans,
examined the effects of dietary fats on plasma hormones in runners. The study
compared three levels of fat composition in the diets of the runners: 17
percent, 32 percent and 41 percent. The results showed that the 32 percent
fat diet significantly reduced cortisol levels in the runners compared to
the 17 percent fat diet. Under the 42 percent, or high-fat, diet, cortisol
levels increased only marginally. The diet lowest in fat produced the highest
cortisol levels.
The authors of this study suggest that higher fat diets may help eliminate
some of the excess cortisol release through an upgraded prostaglandin synthesis.
Prostaglandins are hormonelike substances made from dietary fat that, among
other actions, influence hormonal secretions. They were recently popularized
by the best-selling diet book Enter the Zone, by Barry Sears.
Another possible explanation for the way a high-fat diet dilutes cortisol
involves increased testosterone production. Testosterone has an inverse relationship
to cortisol; that is, when testosterone is elevated in the blood, cortisol
is depressed and vice versa. When testosterone is elevated, anabolic muscle
reactions occur.
Natural bodybuilders seeking to key in to the anticatabolic effects of testosterone
without using synthetic versions, such as anabolic steroids, often resort
to purported testosterone precursors. These over-the-counter products fall
into a gray area of legality due to the Food Supplement Act of 1994. Consequently,
they are freely available and legal, at least for now.
One example of a reputed testosterone precursor is the adrenal hormone DHEA,
which is produced in the pathway that begins with cholesterol and results
in testosterone. That's could be a problem, however, as DHEA, in some instances,
may take divergent pathways, winding up as either an undesirable by-product
of testosterone metabolism called dihydrotestosterone (DHT) or, even worse,
estrogen. DHT is linked to male pattern baldness, prostate enlargement and
acne, while estrogen, in males, leads to gynecomastia, increased fat deposition
under the skin and water retention.
Those over age 40 will probably get the most benefit from DHEA. At that point
in people's lives DHEA synthesis generally undergoes a precipitous drop,
in which case conservative doses of 50 milligrams a day may take the desirable
testosterone pathway by converting to the immediate precursor to testosterone,
androstenedione.
Recently, androstenedione itself became available as an oral supplement.
Some studies show that a liver enzyme can convert androstenedione directly
into testosterone, which can increase plasma testosterone levels up to 300
percent over baseline for about two hours; however, it can also be converted
by another enzyme, aromatase, into estrogen. In addition, no one has figured
out how long an oral supplement of androstenedione continues to remain effective...assuming
that it is effective for testosterone-raising purposes.
Still another over-the-counter hormone that has been suggested as a cortisol
blocker is melatonin, a hormone synthesized in the pineal gland of the brain
from the amino acid tryptophan. While melatonin is undoubtedly an effective
soporific, meaning it puts you to sleep, several studies show it has a negligible
effect on cortisol release.
Tribestan is a trade name for an herbal-derived supplement imported from
Bulgaria. Virtually all the studies on this enigmatic substance were done
in the former Eastern-bloc countries and India, so until recently, it was
ignored in Western countries. Tribestan allegedly works by increasing the
response of luteinizing hormone in the pituitary gland, which controls testosterone
synthesis in the Leydig cells of the testes. The main problem with Tribestan
is getting it and getting it at a good price.
Of the available cortisol-inhibiting supplements, the most controversial
is a fatlike substance called phosphatidylserine (PS). PS is found naturally
in the body, where it's incorporated into cell membranes. Studies show that
it increases cognition, or brain function, in older people and may preserve
optimal brain function in younger people. As for its effect on cortisol,
two published studies show it blunts ACTH release by the pituitary gland.
That would decrease cortisol because ACTH travels in the blood to the adrenal
glands, where it dictates cortisol release.
The apparent effective dosage of PS for this purpose is 800 milligrams a
day. Since the average single pill dose of PS is 100 milligrams, that would
entail taking a minimal eight capsules a day. In contrast, the effective
dose for so-called smart drug purposes is only 300 milligrams a day. The
controversy about PS involves the dearth of studies attesting to its cortisol-blocking
actions and the source of the substance itself.
Many of the studies showing the efficacy of PS used a form derived from bovine
sources, including the two exercise studies that indicated a decreased cortisol
response. Unfortunately, bovine-derived sources strike fear in many people
because of an association with the so-called mad cow disease, which is usually
fatal. While there is absolutely no evidence linking bovine-derived supplements
with the onset of that disease, most of the PS sold today is derived from
soybeans.
Some people, especially those at companies that still sell the bovine variety,
say soy-derived PS is different due to its slightly varied fatty acid configuration.
Animal studies show, however, that the soy version is just as effective as
the bovine version in terms of brain-boosting activity. The real question
is, Does PS actually have any anticatabolic effects in hard-training natural
bodybuilders?
A study that's looking at this question is now under way at California State
University, Chico. The results may show once and for all if PS does have
value for those interested in promoting bodybuilding progress in a safe,
effective and natural manner.
Powerful New Research on Phosphatidylserine
Professor Thomas Fahey of California State University, Chico, recently concluded
a study that established the ability of soy-based phosphatidylserine, or
PS, to reduce blood cortisol during and after bodybuilding-type workouts.
This builds on prior research suggesting PS lowers cortisol produced as a
result of endurance exercise. Compared to the placebo group, lifters taking
in 800 milligrams of PS exhibited the following effects:
1) Markedly reduced perceived exertion
2) Largely unaltered testosterone levels
3) Blood cortisol reductions of 25 percent
Based on this and prior studies, it can now be said that PS inhibits exercise-induced
cortisol production for both weight-training and endurance athletes, a veritable
boon to drug-free bodybuilders whose main barrier to faster hypertrophy is
the catabolism caused by high cortisol levels. This underscores the fact
that PS supplements such as Muscle-Link's Cort-Bloc should be a supplement
staple of all mass-seeking bodybuilders.
--Steve Holman
Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 2 capsules (1000 mg)
Servings per Container: 30
Amount per Serving:
Phosphatidylserine: 200 mg
Glutamine Peptide: 800 mg
Ingredients:
Medical-grade phosphatidylserine extract with glutamine peptide. Other Ingredients:
gelatin, magnesium stearate.
Directions:
Take 2-4 capsules on workout days. And during intense dieting 1 capsule on
non-workout days before bedtime. Recommended use: For all high-intensity
bodybuilders.