Author Topic: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?  (Read 24600 times)

huge285

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #25 on: March 05, 2007, 08:22:37 PM »
After being on the diet for 3 days, your brain will go into ketosis and you'll be able to focus better than before you started dieting.

Dredlock Rasta

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #26 on: March 05, 2007, 08:24:08 PM »
I still feel sluggish and tired, especially if I'm doing cardio in the morning and weights at night.
Don't let em fool ya

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #27 on: March 05, 2007, 08:25:54 PM »
After being on the diet for 3 days, your brain will go into ketosis and you'll be able to focus better than before you started dieting.

Not good at all in applications where Concentration and mental power is needed.




http://www.universityrelations.und.edu/discovery/fall_2003/html/4.html

Exploring how diet affects pilot performance

What pilots eat and how it affects their performance is the subject of unique, collaborative research being conducted by one of the dual-career faculty couples at the University of North Dakota.

The researchers are Paul Lindseth, associate dean for academics at the John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences, and Glenda Lindseth, professor and director of research for the College of Nursing.

Paul, a former pilot and instructor in the U.S. Air Force, is currently a flight instructor at UND. He long has been concerned about the performance level of students as it relates to nutrition habits. Glenda, a registered dietitian and registered nurse, has a special interest in the effects of eating patterns on performance. The two have worked together in a series of four earlier studies on the subject.

The four-year, $621,310 project is funded by the U.S. Army Biomedical Research Command.

The Lindseths say their research could make significant contributions to understanding effects of diet on cognition and performance, thereby helping decrease the number of human factor errors related to diet, nutrition and health.

The study is designed to determine cognition and flight performance scores of pilots receiving a non-manipulated control diet, high-protein diet, high-fat diet, or carbohydrate diet. Researchers analyze for differences in flight performance and cognition scores among groups of pilots on the four diets.

Previous studies have found that both passengers and pilots who ate high-protein or dairy products immediately before flying tended to feel worse. A less conclusive finding is that salty foods figure into air sickness. And there is an indication that higher-carbohydrate foods, such as bread and pasta, along with fruit, are preferable before flights.

Paul Lindseth says airsickness can affect 25 to 30 percent of pilots. He says flying has been around 100 years, but only in the past 25 years has there been a focus on the human element. Yet, eighty percent of accidents result from human error.
Consultants and collaborators in the study are Richard Jensen, director of the Aviation Psychology Laboratory at Ohio State University; Warren Jensen, director of aeromedical research at the Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences at UND; Thomas Petros, professor of psychology at UND; and Gladys Block, professor of public health nutrition at the University of California-Berkeley.

Also involved are undergraduate research assistants from the UND Honors Program and highly talented high school students funded by North Dakota EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research).

 

UND: A leader in research as well as flight training

As the operator of the one of the largest and most prestigious university-level programs in aviation, the John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences is a natural place to conduct research on pilot performance, says its dean, Bruce Smith.

In recognition of these capabilities, the Federal Aviation Administration has designated the School as one of the nation’s Air Transportation Centers of Excellence for General Aviation.

Affiliated with the School is the UND Aerospace Foundation, which provides a vehicle for developing partnerships with external entities, including private industry and foreign governments. Smith said the Aerospace Foundation first became known for its development of new training methodologies for airline pilots, but it has broadened its research agenda over the years.

legbreaker

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #28 on: March 05, 2007, 08:29:53 PM »
Whatever works for him.   

I just remembered when I met palumbo last year.  Very nice guy.  Short as shit tho.  Don't buy that 5'7" stuff.    i'd say 5'5" at best.  But was a very cool guy in person.

Hahaha, I hope your kiddin because he definitly aint 5'5"...more like 5"11" or so and I know Dave since he started training.

As far as diet or knowledge, I wouldn't question what he says, just trust in it, believe it and don't look back and you WILL see the results you want.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #29 on: March 05, 2007, 08:32:26 PM »
Not good at all in applications where Concentration and mental power is needed.




http://www.universityrelations.und.edu/discovery/fall_2003/html/4.html

Exploring how diet affects pilot performance

What pilots eat and how it affects their performance is the subject of unique, collaborative research being conducted by one of the dual-career faculty couples at the University of North Dakota.

The researchers are Paul Lindseth, associate dean for academics at the John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences, and Glenda Lindseth, professor and director of research for the College of Nursing.

Paul, a former pilot and instructor in the U.S. Air Force, is currently a flight instructor at UND. He long has been concerned about the performance level of students as it relates to nutrition habits. Glenda, a registered dietitian and registered nurse, has a special interest in the effects of eating patterns on performance. The two have worked together in a series of four earlier studies on the subject.

The four-year, $621,310 project is funded by the U.S. Army Biomedical Research Command.

The Lindseths say their research could make significant contributions to understanding effects of diet on cognition and performance, thereby helping decrease the number of human factor errors related to diet, nutrition and health.

The study is designed to determine cognition and flight performance scores of pilots receiving a non-manipulated control diet, high-protein diet, high-fat diet, or carbohydrate diet. Researchers analyze for differences in flight performance and cognition scores among groups of pilots on the four diets.

Previous studies have found that both passengers and pilots who ate high-protein or dairy products immediately before flying tended to feel worse. A less conclusive finding is that salty foods figure into air sickness. And there is an indication that higher-carbohydrate foods, such as bread and pasta, along with fruit, are preferable before flights.

Paul Lindseth says airsickness can affect 25 to 30 percent of pilots. He says flying has been around 100 years, but only in the past 25 years has there been a focus on the human element. Yet, eighty percent of accidents result from human error.
Consultants and collaborators in the study are Richard Jensen, director of the Aviation Psychology Laboratory at Ohio State University; Warren Jensen, director of aeromedical research at the Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences at UND; Thomas Petros, professor of psychology at UND; and Gladys Block, professor of public health nutrition at the University of California-Berkeley.

Also involved are undergraduate research assistants from the UND Honors Program and highly talented high school students funded by North Dakota EPSCoR (Experimental Program to Stimulate Competitive Research).

 

UND: A leader in research as well as flight training

As the operator of the one of the largest and most prestigious university-level programs in aviation, the John D. Odegard School of Aerospace Sciences is a natural place to conduct research on pilot performance, says its dean, Bruce Smith.

In recognition of these capabilities, the Federal Aviation Administration has designated the School as one of the nation’s Air Transportation Centers of Excellence for General Aviation.

Affiliated with the School is the UND Aerospace Foundation, which provides a vehicle for developing partnerships with external entities, including private industry and foreign governments. Smith said the Aerospace Foundation first became known for its development of new training methodologies for airline pilots, but it has broadened its research agenda over the years.




Pilot's diets have nothing to do with bodybuilder's diets.
Don't let em fool ya

The True Adonis

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #30 on: March 05, 2007, 08:33:05 PM »


Pilot's diets have nothing to do with bodybuilder's diets.
Mental concentration and cognition.

wolfgang187

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #31 on: March 05, 2007, 08:34:17 PM »
After being on the diet for 3 days, your brain will go into ketosis and you'll be able to focus better than before you started dieting.


Eat more fat it taste good anyway and you won't have a drop in blood sugar which will make you hungry.

Knives

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #32 on: March 05, 2007, 08:36:44 PM »
Palumbo used that diet on Toney Freeman, for his prep for the Ironman, Sacramento, and ASC.  Seemed to work for Toney.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #33 on: March 05, 2007, 08:40:34 PM »
How Carbohydrate Foods Can Improve Memory in Older Adults - Studies 
   
When Dr. Carol Greenwood tested the memory of older adults after they ate a breakfast of mashed potatoes or barley, she found that "eating carbohydrate foods can improve memory within an hour after ingestion in healthy elderly people with relatively poor memories."

In another study, Greenwood and her colleagues at the University of Toronto gave a group of healthy senior citizens a bowl of cereal and milk, along with white grape juice for breakfast. Another group only drank water. When tested twenty minutes later, the cereal-eaters had a better memory – able to remember 25% more facts.
   Not only does a diet lacking in carbohydrates cut off the brain's main energy supply, Greenwood said a scarcity of glucose can impede the synthesis of acetylcholine, one of the brain's key neurotransmitters.1

topics
 
 
 
 
Breakfast and Memory - Studies
   
Regardless of the source, caloric intake after an overnight fast can cause a short burst in memory capacity, scientists discovered. Carbohydrates, however, generally brought longer-term memory benefits than either fats or proteins in the people tested.

Lead scientist, Dr. Carol Greenwood, emphasized the advantage of nutritious carbohydrates – fruits, vegetables, and whole grains – instead of simple sugars such as pastries. Her studies point to the importance of children's breakfasts to school performance. 2

Another University of Toronto study compared the memory-improving effects of different breakfasts eaten after an overnight fast. Participants who consumed a carbohydrate breakfast of potatoes or barley performed better on short- and long-term memory tests, compared to those who consumed only a glucose-laden lemon drink. Both groups did better than the participants who consumed only an inactive placebo.
   "Our study showed that eating carbohydrate foods can improve memory within an hour after ingestion in healthy elderly people with relatively poor memories," said lead author Randall J. Kaplan. "Individuals with seemingly minor deficits in glucose regulation appear to perform worse on cognitive (memory) tests and are most sensitive to the beneficial effects of carbohydrates."3

 
 
 

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #34 on: March 05, 2007, 08:42:43 PM »
Brain Energy Demand
 
   
Your brain cells need two times more energy than the other cells in your body.

Neurons, the cells that communicate with each other, have a high demand for energy because they're always in a state of metabolic activity. Even during sleep, neurons are still at work repairing and rebuilding their worn out structural components.

They are manufacturing enzymes and neurotransmitters that must be transported out to the very ends of their– nerve branches, some that can be several inches, or feet, away.

Most demanding of a neuron's energy, however, are the bioelectric signals responsible for communication throughout the nervous system. This nerve transmission consumes one-half of all the brain's energy (nearly 10% of the whole body's energy).
 

wolfgang187

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #35 on: March 05, 2007, 08:43:31 PM »
How Carbohydrate Foods Can Improve your deadlift of 225 a 112 times.

Dredlock Rasta

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #36 on: March 05, 2007, 08:45:26 PM »
Mental concentration and cognition.

A bodybuilder's need for concentration and cognition is much different than a pilot's. Pilots need a lot more after all their lives are at stake and they usually aren't trying to achieve low bodyfat levels.
Don't let em fool ya

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #37 on: March 05, 2007, 08:46:07 PM »
Brain Power – The Energy of Thought and Memory 
 
   
Most of us have discovered that thinking can be tiring, even exhausting. As the primary source of energy in the human brain, glucose can be rapidly used up during mental activity.

Some interesting research has shown that mental concentration actually drains glucose from a key part of the brain associated with memory and learning – underscoring just how crucial this blood sugar is for proper brain function.

topics
 
 
Glucose, Learning and Memory - Study     
   
Psychology professor Paul E. Gold has researched the stability of glucose levels in the brain. Working with Ewan C. McNay , they found that as rats went through a maze, concentrations of glucose declined in the animals' hippocampus , a key brain area involved in learning and memory – even more dramatically so in older brains.

Except under conditions of starvation, it was thought that the brain always had an ample supply of glucose. "While this is the case in terms of consciousness, the new findings suggest that glucose is not always present in ample amounts to optimally support learning and memory functions," said Gold, who is director of the Medical Scholars Program in the University of Illinois College of Medicine.
   "The brain runs on glucose. Young rats can do a pretty good job of supplying all the glucose that a particular area of the brain needs until the task becomes difficult," explained McNay, a postdoctoral researcher in psychology at Yale University. "For an old rat given the same task, the brain glucose supply vanishes out the window. This correlates with a big deficit in performance. A lack of fuel affects the ability to think and remember."

topics
 
 
 
 
Glucose, Age, Memory and Learning - Study
   
In the May 2001 issue of Neurobiology of Learning and Memory, Gold, and McNay reported that glucose drainage during a task is specific to the hippocampus, where extracellular levels fell by 30%. (Other brain areas remained stable.) "Only the part of the brain involved with what the animal is asked to do is affected by changes in glucose usage," Gold said.-Not sure how study relates to other study about age, memory and learning.

In the May 2001 issue of the Journal of Gerontology, Gold and McNay described a study which showed how 24-month-old rats experienced a 48% decline in hippocampal extracellular glucose levels, and needed 30 minutes to recover from a maze-related task. Younger, three-month-old rats had only a 12% decline and recovered quickly. When older rats were injected with glucose supplements prior to testing, they did not show the drainage of glucose – and performed at the same levels as the younger rats.
   "Glucose enhances learning and memory not only in rats but also in many populations of humans," says Gold. "For schoolchildren, this research implies that the contents and timing of meals may need to be coordinated to have the most beneficial cognitive effects that enhance learning."

 
 
 

wolfgang187

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #38 on: March 05, 2007, 08:46:21 PM »
Mental concentration and cognition.



You need to put your mental concentration and cognition into making a video.  Pilots have different responsibilitys then a bodybuilder.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #39 on: March 05, 2007, 08:47:42 PM »


You to put your mental concentration and cognition into making a video tape.

"You to put"?

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #40 on: March 05, 2007, 08:50:17 PM »
If you live a clean lifestyle with no rec/drugs, this diet will be torcher unless your getting ready for a show...In that case their is a means to an end...For the everyday guy who wants to stay lean...Yes this will work great but you will be one miserable bastard...Unless of course you use recs to offset the insanity..

AVBG

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #41 on: March 05, 2007, 08:51:57 PM »
If you live a clean lifestyle with no rec/drugs, this diet will be torcher unless your getting ready for a show...In that case their is a means to an end...For the everyday guy who wants to stay lean...Yes this will work great but you will be one miserable bastard...Unless of course you use recs to offset the insanity..

now that's an idea!

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #42 on: March 05, 2007, 08:52:47 PM »
Not necessarily once you get used to it, and not if you're an endurance athlete
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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #43 on: March 05, 2007, 08:53:40 PM »
A bodybuilder's need for concentration and cognition is much different than a pilot's. Pilots need a lot more after all their lives are at stake and they usually aren't trying to achieve low bodyfat levels.

Yah, Mental health, cognition and increasing the ability to learn as well as proper brain function are not really that important.  ::)

Bast000

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #44 on: March 05, 2007, 08:54:41 PM »
david palumbo needs to have low cognition so that he's able to bang collette nelson.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #45 on: March 05, 2007, 08:58:23 PM »
he might follow this to a tee,but haven't u seen pic's of him with a bunch of mcdonald's bags in front of him,i don't think he chucked all the bun's away?

He ups the carbs in the off season.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #46 on: March 05, 2007, 08:59:03 PM »
This is a contest prep diet for a bodybuilding competition, not a deadlifting a diet.



So he has no clue of what he is talking about.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #47 on: March 05, 2007, 08:59:57 PM »
This is a contest prep diet for a bodybuilding competition, not a deadlifting a diet.

Its not optimal, efficient or practical.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #48 on: March 05, 2007, 09:00:08 PM »
david palumbo needs to have low cognition so that he's able to bang collette nelson.

Bast, that's teh funniest post you have made in the last 12 months.

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Re: What do you guys think of Palumbo's diet ?
« Reply #49 on: March 05, 2007, 09:02:22 PM »
Yah, Mental health, cognition and increasing the ability to learn as well as proper brain function are not really that important.  ::)

Low carb diets don't affect mental health or learning ability. You're brain is still going to function if you're on a low carb diet. Your body eventually adjusts. That is what it is supposed to do. You don't go brain dead on a low carb diet.

Low carb diets not related to poor mental health.
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