BCAA
Essential For All Bodybuilders And Athletes
Among the most beneficial and effective supplements in any
sports nutrition program are branched chain amino acids. These are the
essential aminos leucine, isoleucine, and valine.
Although these supplements have been around for a long time and the
scientific understanding in the exercise performance benefits of BCAA
supplementation is rich many people don't know exactly how they exert
their effects or how and when to use them properly.
You probably know that amino acids are
the building blocks of protein. When you eat a protein food, it gets
digested in the stomach and intestine into individual amino acids and
short chains of amino acids that are small enough to be absorbed into
the bloodstream. These amino acids have far reaching effects in the body
from building and repairing tissues, to producing chemicals that enable
our brains to function optimally.
What Is The Difference Between Essential and Non-Essential Amino
Acids?
Essential amino acids cannot be made by the body. You must get them
from complete protein foods or combinations of incomplete vegetable
foods. There are 9 essential amino acids: histidine, isoleucine, leucine,
lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, and valine. Your body can
make non-essential amino acids by itself from vitamins and other amino
acids.
The term "non-essential" can be misleading since all amino acids are
essential for proper metabolism and certain non-essential amino acids,
such as glutamine, become very essential. The 13 non-essential amino
acids are alanine, arginine, aspartic acid, cysteine, cystine, glutamic
acid, glutamine, glycine, hydroxyproline, proline, serine, & tyrosine.
The essential branched chain amino acids (BCAA's) are of special
importance for athletes because they are metabolized in the muscle,
rather than in the liver. Here's how this works: After digestion once
protein is broken down into individual amino acids these aminos can
either be used to build new proteins or be burned as fuel to produce
energy.