carbohydrates

4 interactions related to carbohydrates

leucine + carbohydrates

Leucine activates mTOR-driven muscle protein synthesis and stimulates insulin release. Taken with carbohydrate, the insulin response is larger than with carbohydrate alone, which helps suppress muscle protein breakdown and increase amino acid uptake. The combination supports the post-exercise anabolic response, though leucine works best as part of a complete protein source rather than on its own.

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leucinecarbohydratesmuscle protein synthesisinsulinmtorpost-workoutrecoveryathletic synergy

electrolytes + carbohydrates

Sodium and glucose are absorbed together by the SGLT1 cotransporter in the small intestine, and their co-ingestion pulls water across the gut wall faster than either does alone. This is the basis of oral rehydration therapy and of modern sports drinks, where a fluid carrying both carbohydrate and sodium hydrates faster than water while also supplying fuel during prolonged exercise.

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electrolytescarbohydrateshydrationsodiumendurancesports drinksglt1athletic synergy

creatine + carbohydrates

Taking creatine together with carbohydrate raises insulin, which increases how much creatine skeletal muscle retains by stimulating the sodium-dependent creatine transporter. The effect mainly speeds up the loading phase; long-term muscle saturation is reached either way with daily consistency.

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creatinecarbohydratesinsulinmuscle uptakesupplement timingstrength trainingergogenicathletic synergy

bcaa + carbohydrates

Taking branched-chain amino acids with carbohydrate around training produces a modest, additive boost to post-exercise muscle protein synthesis through the insulin response and leucine-driven mTOR signaling. The effect is real but small, and BCAAs lack the other essential amino acids needed to fully build muscle, so a complete protein source with carbohydrate is the better default.

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bcaacarbohydratesmuscle protein synthesisinsulinrecoveryresistance trainingleucineathletic synergy