Nitric
Oxide: Will It Help You Gain Weight Fast?
Nitric Oxide, also know
as "N.O.", is one of the latest supplements to
hit the market, promising muscle
mass and allowing you to gain weight.
Can this supplement in fact help you to gain muscle and build mass?
If you believe what all the magazines are saying, then I have some land
in the Everglades I'd like to sell you.
The
bottom line behind nitric oxide supplements (when you shuffle through
all the "mumbo-jumbo" sales pitch and hype that are in the ads that
promote these products) is that it is a "vasodilator", which simply
means that it supposedly dilates, or opens up, your blood vessels.
This
"opening" up wider of the blood vessels supposedly will allow more
blood to flow to the working muscles, which will supposedly "enhance"
the pump, which will supposedly engorge them and make them larger,
helping you gain muscle weight.
Well, there are 2 major points
that have to be considered here when evaluating how well they truly are
in helping you build muscle:
1) Does nitric oxide really open up the blood vessels?
2) Is getting a "massive pump" important if you are trying to gain
weight / build muscle mass?
If and how much nitric oxide dilates your blood vessels is still a
topic in discussion.
There have been NO un-biased, independent, peer-reviewed studies done
on this to make it conclusive.
So, we really can't say "yes" or "no".
However,
let's play "make believe" and pretend that "yes", nitric oxide
supplements do allow more blood to flow into a working muscle.
If that's the case, then let's consider the next point.
Do you need to get a big blood pump into the muscle to make it grow?
Will it allow you to gain weight and build muscle mass?
Just about everyone thinks that "yes", you must get a pump in a muscle
to build it.
However, when you are training a muscle in reality you aren't pushing
or sending more blood to the muscle.
What's
actually happening is that when the fibers contract the area inside of
the muscle gets smaller, which results in the blood that's already in
there to become trapped and the pressure increased.
So, in
reality, there isn't more blood going into the muscle, there's actually
less since the blood that's in there is trapped, cannot leave, nor
allow fresh blood to enter.
That's also why as you continue to do reps you begin to feel the
"burning" sensation in the working muscle.
That's a major sign that there is no oxygen anymore inside the blood
that's in the muscle.
When there is no oxygen in the blood it creates a chemical called
lactic acid.
Lactic acid is what causes this "burning" feeling.
There is no oxygen in the blood because fresh blood can't get in there
with new oxygen and nutrients!
Plus, you can do 1000 reps of an exercise using a 20 pound dumbbell and
get a major pump.
But
I guarantee you that you won't build as big a muscle as if you were to
use heavier weight, even though it may not make it easier to get as big
a "pump".
So all this "hoopla" about nitric oxide supplements
allowing you to get a better pump to build more muscle mass is nothing
but hype!!!!
It won't help you one bit to gain muscle weight.
You
watch and see, shortly all of these "N.O." supplements are going to
fade into the shadows and some new powder or pill is going to be the
new "talk of the town", I guarantee it!
Sincerely,
Jonathan Perez
Cleveland Firefighter
Certified ACE / IAFF / IAFC Firefighter Peer Fitness Trainer
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jonathan Perez has
written many articles exposing the many weight training and diet myths
being spread about in the bodybuilding industry and on the internet.
His eBook, "From Skinny
To Muscular!", has helped many naturally skinny individuals gain
muscle size and weight by detailing the training strategies and eating
techniques that actually work at building muscle, instead of strength.
Many of Jonathan's other articles are located here: Read These
Articles To Help You Gain Weight.
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Building Secrets Revealed
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