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Welcome to our new site! We have been training and coaching clients for over a decade helping them lose fat, get stronger, and live better while working off the stress of everyday life in a fun, challenging and supportive environment that our programs provides.

 

welcome.gif 300x287 Hello world!We are taking on new clients! You can choose whatever flavor that suits your fitness tastebuds!  We offer different programs ranging from Boot Camps to Private Training, Kettelbell Clubs to Running and Lifting Workshops, Power Yoga sessions to Nutrition Lectures and special events!

Below are some articles and links we thought might be interesting. Be sure to check back soon and if you feel you are ready to make the change you and your body deserves, you can contact us HERE or feel free to call us at 813.401.2234 so we can discuss your goals and how we can help you in more detail.

 
Don’t join an easy crowd; you won’t grow. Go where the expectations & the demands to perform are high – Jim Rohn

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Fructose, insulin resistance, and metabolic dyslipidemia

obesity chart 300x236 Fructose, insulin resistance, and metabolic dyslipidemiaObesity and type 2 diabetes are occurring at epidemic rates in the United States and many parts of the world. The “obesity epidemic” appears to have emerged largely from changes in our diet and reduced physical activity.

An important but not well-appreciated dietary change has been the substantial increase in the amount of dietary fructose consumption from high intake of sucrose and high fructose corn syrup, a common sweetener used in the food industry. A high flux of fructose to the liver, the main organ capable of metabolizing this simple carbohydrate, perturbs glucose metabolism and glucose uptake pathways, and leads to a significantly enhanced rate of de novo lipogenesis and triglyceride (TG) synthesis, driven by the high flux of glycerol and acyl portions of TG molecules from fructose catabolism.

These metabolic disturbances appear to underlie the induction of insulin resistance commonly observed with high fructose feeding in both humans and animal models. Fructose-induced insulin resistant states are commonly characterized by a profound metabolic dyslipidemia, which appears to result from hepatic and intestinal overproduction of atherogenic lipoprotein particles. Thus, emerging evidence from recent epidemiological and biochemical studies clearly suggests that the high dietary intake of fructose has rapidly become an important causative factor in the development of the metabolic syndrome.

There is an urgent need for increased public awareness of the risks associated with high fructose consumption and greater efforts should be made to curb the supplementation of packaged foods with high fructose additives. The present review will discuss the trends in fructose consumption, the metabolic consequences of increased fructose intake, and the molecular mechanisms leading to fructose-induced lipogenesis, insulin resistance and metabolic dyslipidemia.

via www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

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NYTimes: To Keep Moving, Look Beyond the Physical

HotBikiniGirlsLiftingCF 300x195 NYTimes: To Keep Moving, Look Beyond the PhysicalFrom The New York Times:

PERSONAL HEALTH: To Keep Moving, Look Beyond the Physical

For many people, regular physical activity is as much about social interaction as it is about being healthy.

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Q and A – Temperature and Exercise – Question – NYTimes.com

Q. Does a person tend to burn more fat exercising outdoors in colder weather or in hotter weather? I am leaning to the colder weather side, since the body has to work harder to keep the body temperature near normal.

via www.nytimes.com

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The Great Joe Rollino, Bender of Steel, Dies at 104, (NOT By Natural Causes!) – NYTimes.com

 The Great Joe Rollino, Bender of Steel, Dies at 104, (NOT By Natural Causes!)   NYTimes.com

Joe Rollino once lifted 475 pounds. He used neither his arms nor his legs but, reportedly, his teeth. With just one finger he raised up 635 pounds; with his back he moved 3,200. He bit down on quarters to bend them with his thumb.

Click here to see the full story

via www.nytimes.com

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Sports Science of Barefoot Running

barefoot running sand Sports Science of Barefoot Running

Running barefoot is associated with a substantially lower prevalence of acute injuries of the ankle and chronic injuries of the lower leg in developing countries, but well-designed studies of the effects of barefoot and shod running on injury are lacking. Laboratory studies show that the energy cost of running is reduced by about 4% when the feet are not shod. In spite of these apparent benefits, barefoot running is rare in competition, and there are no published controlled trials of the effects of running barefoot on simulated or real competitive performance.

KEYWORDS: economy, efficiency, injury, performance, shoes

Reviewers:  Caroline Burge, School of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane 4006, Australia;  Larry M Feinman, Mountain Chiropractic, Lafayette, Colorado 80026, USA;  Ian Shrier, Center for Clinical Epidemiology and Community Studies, SMBD-Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec H3T 1E2, Canada

via sportsci.org

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Exercise and gene expression: physiological regulation of the human genome through physical activity — J Physiol

Exercise genome Exercise and gene expression: physiological regulation of the human genome through physical activity  —  J PhysiolThe current human genome was moulded and refined through generations of time. We propose that the basic framework for physiologic gene regulation was selected during an era of obligatory physical activity, as the survival of our Late Palaeolithic (50 000–10 000 BC) ancestors depended on hunting and gathering.

A sedentary lifestyle in such an environment probably meant elimination of that individual organism. The phenotype of the present day Homo sapiens genome is much different from that of our ancient ancestors, primarily as a consequence of expressing evolutionarily programmed Late Palaeolithic genes in an environment that is predominantly sedentary. In this sense, our current genome is maladapted, resulting in abnormal gene expression, which in turn frequently manifests itself as clinically overt disease.

We speculate that some of these genes still play a role in survival by causing premature death from chronic diseases produced by physical inactivity. We also contend that the current scientific evidence supports the notion that disruptions in cellular homeostasis are diminished in magnitude in physically active individuals compared with sedentary individuals due to the natural selection of gene expression that supports the physically active lifestyle displayed by our ancestors.

We speculate that genes evolved with the expectation of requiring a certain threshold of physical activity for normal physiologic gene expression, and thus habitual exercise in sedentary cultures restores perturbed homeostatic mechanisms towards the normal physiological range of the Palaeolithic Homo sapiens.

This hypothesis allows us to ask the question of whether normal physiological values change as a result of becoming sedentary. In summary, in sedentary cultures, daily physical activity normalizes gene expression towards patterns established to maintain the survival in the Late Palaeolithic era.

via jp.physoc.org

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Squat

 Squat

“Because somewhere out there, a girl is warming up with your 1 rep max.”

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