Why Building Muscle Is Your Biggest Alley in the Anti-Aging Strategy
One of the most common benefits our thousands of customers share with us when taking Vitality Boost is their increased energy and drive to workout more. This leads to your body’s ability to fight aging and stay younger for longer by improving your muscle mass and strength, which has enormous longevity benefits that the latest research points out.
Skeletal muscle is the largest endocrine organ system in the body. This means that when you contract muscle through resistance training or cardiovascular activity, your muscles secrete hormones and peptides called myokines. Myokines travel and interact with the liver and brain and other organs, regulating many other parts of your body from hormonal to immune systems. Skeletal muscle is also the place where most of our body’s mitochondria resides.
But those are just a few aspects of skeletal muscle. It’s also the metabolic disposable unit, used for carb disposal, fatty acid oxidation and cholesterol. Skeletal muscle is also your body armor. If you get sick, your body will pull amino acids from your skeletal muscle.
MUSCLE & PROTEIN
Interestingly, skeletal muscle is able to sense the quality of your diet, specifically protein. If you get your protein quantity and quality right, you can get your older muscle tissue to respond like younger muscle.
Muscle protein synthesis is a biomarker of muscle health. When you don’t trigger muscle protein synthesis (through contractual proteins and mitochondrial proteins, which comes about through aerobic exercise), your muscles are not producing myokines, which affect the entirety of your bodily systems.
If you’re going to design a diet, the evidence suggests that you need .7 to 1 gram of protein per body pound of your ideal body weight. If you don’t know what that is, Dr. Gabrielle Lyon says to pick the weight of the last time you felt amazing.
Protein is a very unique macronutrient because it is primarily the only essential macronutrient. If you’re looking to design a diet that will protect you as you age, the primary thing you need to incorporate into your diet is protein.
The way you should do that is by thinking of protein in terms of hierarchy.
With protein, it’s the first meal that matters most. Your first meal of the day should be a minimum of thirty grams of protein, and an upwards of fifty grams. The second meal doesn’t really matter. But by the third meal, getting enough protein is crucial since you will be going into an overnight fast. Your protein levels become important in order to protect your body mass.
For those choosing a plant-based protein diet, most will need to increase your protein to 35% more protein than those on animal-based diets. This is because plant-based protein absorption is significantly less.
MUSCLE & CREATINE
Did you know that the naturally occurring compound, creatine, is only found in skeletal muscle? Within muscle cells, creatine is primarily stored in the form of phosphocreatine, a high-energy compound that serves as a rapid and potent reservoir of phosphate groups.
During short bursts of intense physical activity such as weightlifting or sprinting, phosphocreatine donates its phosphate group to adenosine diphosphate (ADP), regenerating adenosine triphosphate (ATP)—which we know as the primary energy currency of cells. This process enhances the cell’s ability to sustain brief, high-intensity efforts.
MUSCLE & NAD (the vital role in cellular energy)
In skeletal muscle, NAD plays a fundamental role in cellular respiration, particular when it comes to glycolytic and oxidative pathways. During glycolysis, NAD converts certain phosphates into ATP, which is essential for energy demands during muscle contraction.
NAD-dependent enzymes, such as sirtuins, are involved in various cellular functions, including gene expression, DNA repair, and mitochondrial biogenesis. Sirtuins, activated by NAD, play a vital role in the maintenance of skeletal muscle health by regulating processes like protein synthesis, degradation, and cellular stress responses.
NAD has also been implicated in modulating skeletal muscle stem cell function, impacting muscle regeneration and repair.
In essence, it’s a circular system. Your body creates more energy with muscular use, and you need energy for that same muscular use.
That’s why NAD is the missing link, the lifesaving channel for your skeletal muscular system. And this is one of many reasons why testing your NAD levels is vital and supplementing with to boost your NAD levels back to optimal levels is central to longevity(think when you were age 15 your NAD levels were fantastic most likely).
Good news-we’ve made it easier than ever to do both with our NAD mini starter kit which comes with one test and one month’s supply of Vitality Boost. $406 retail value for $317. Or you can pick up an NAD test on it’s own or our Vitality Boost.
“Muscle is the organ of longevity. If we shift our paradigm of thinking to focus on muscle, we can change the way that we age and optimize our health and wellness in a way that not just creates physical strength, but creates mental strength as well.”
—Dr. Gabrielle Lyon, best selling author of Forever Strong.
In the meantime, we remain committed to your most energized and vital lifestyle.
The Highest Bar. Life Elevated. PureClean Performance