Many of the bodybuilders of the 60’s to put on mass were on the Vince Gironda’s diet of steak, eggs, protein powder mixed with whole cream, etc. The diet also recommended 36 whole eggs per day and 1-2 pounds of red meat per day. It was a high fat, high protein, low carb diet with plenty of green veggies. It was also packed with a lot of cholesterol which may have been the most important component of the diet. Based on the last several articles that I have written it should be no surprise that cholesterol is important for building muscle. Cholesterol is a precursor for testosterone production. Unlike most cells that use cholesterol primary for normal cell functioning, Leydig cells (testosterone producing cells in the testis) have additional requirements for cholesterol, because it is the essential precursor for testosterone production. A new study in Endocrinology sheds some interesting new evidence to support how cholesterol is needed for testosterone production. Researchers reported that an increase in leutinizing hormone (a hormone that signals testosterone production) resulted in an increase in the synthesis of cholesterol synthesis and uptake in the testis16. So if you are on a low cholesterol diet, it may have a negative impact on muscle building due to impaired androgen production. Researchers have long thought that cholesterol may be important for muscle building but never had the science to back it up…till now. A recent study put the cholesterol muscle building theory to test. They took 25 men and 30 women who filled out food diaries of what they ate and followed them over 12 weeks in conjunction with a resistance training program. The researchers compared the relationship between dietary cholesterol and gains in muscle mass. At the end of the study, the average dietary cholesterol consumption was strongly associated with the change in lean mass. Interestingly, although dietary protein was correlated with dietary cholesterol, protein by itself was not significantly correlated with change in lean mass. This means the researchers found that cholesterol but not protein was associated with changes in lean muscle mass. This means that all those cholesterol free egg beaters that bodybuilders have been eating for years aren’t going to do jack shit for building muscle! The researchers noted that the study participants with higher cholesterol levels were more likely to have higher levels of inflammatory chemicals and cardiovascular disease risk factors. The scientists noted that cholesterol increases the body’s inflammatory response to the muscle damage from exercise, and that this inflammation response stimulates the body’s muscle-building “anabolic” processes. (While chronic inflammation in arteries or other tissues is unhealthful, short-lived inflammation is an integral part of the muscle-building process.)
source:musculardevelopment.com