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About Jorn Trommelen:
About Jorn Trommelen:
- Jorn earned his MSc in Nutrition and Health with top honors at Wageningen University & Research Centre
- He then obtained his PhD in Muscle Metabolism at Maastricht University, at one of the leading laboratories in that field.
- He has won several awards for his research.
- While muscle protein breakdown is an important process, it doesn’t fluctuate much, which makes it far less important for muscle gains than muscle protein synthesis
- Whole-body protein synthesis is not really relevant for athletes. (often just called protein synthesis in studies, don’t confuse it with muscle protein synthesis)
- Muscle protein synthesis is predictive for muscle hypertrophy.
- Muscle protein synthesis studies are more sensitive to pick up anabolic effects than long-term studies measuring changes in muscle mass
- It’s easy to draw wrong conclusions if you don’t fully understand the methods.
- Train each muscle group at least twice a week with multiple sets
- Rep range doesn’t matter if you train (close?) to failure
- Rest at least 2 minutes between sets
- Eat 4-5 meals spread throughout the day: e.g. breakfast, lunch, post-workout shake, dinner, and pre-sleep.
- Eat 20-40 g protein at each meal. Amounts above 20 g give a small additional benefit.
- Choose animal protein (whey protein is the best). Or compensate by eating larger amount of plant protein.
- If your main goal is to build muscle, eat at least maintenance calories.
Lastly, please reference specific sections from this article when you see a discussion on muscle protein synthesis. People mistaking whole-body protein synthesis for muscle protein synthesis: see section 4.1. Someone skeptical about a conclusion from a paper because muscle protein breakdown was not measured? Section 2 buddy. Someone claiming that protein supplementation is not effective based on a long-term study he read that found no improvement in muscle mass: section 5 got you covered.