Weekly rapamycin and protein/resistance training regimen
Hi everyone,
I'm planning to start my first dose this weekend (50 yo male) and have been wondering something that I've never seen addressed by the gurus. On the day I take the weekly dose (or even for a day or 2 after that?) should I avoid protein powder supplementation and/or lifting weights, since these activate mTOR and could conceivably work against the rapamycin? Maybe I should even do a short-term fast or condensed fast-mimicking period each week around the time I take the rapa which could add to the mTOR suppression and hence amplify the positive effects on autophagy? Any thoughts on this? Thanks!
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I am high DAILY exerciser, both resistance and aerobic. I take my Rapamycin once per week, irrespective of my normal meal timing/macros or exercise. Rapamycin has a half life of 60-80 hrs. There are mTOR INDEPENDENT and Rapamycin INDEPENDENT pathways to muscle building. This is the "myth" of Rapamycin blunting exercise. It's very complex. I wouldn't do anything contrary to your optimal health protocols.
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Thanks! I'll try @Blagosklonny. Even though the drug has a long half-life, when we're dosing it weekly it's still down to 1/2 concentration in about 2 or 2.5 days, so wouldn't we want to make the most out of those couple of days where rapamycin concentration is highest? Perhaps by doing things that add/synergize with mTOR inhibition (fasting or modified fasting with low protein, avoiding resistance training, etc)?
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I think it's worth for a while to stop taking protein powder and also stop lifting weights. It is better to eat regular food like buckwheat and vegetables, and any active sport contributes to vasoconstriction, which works against rapamycin. I also suppose that you can use prendo.com simulations. They will analyze your health characteristics, current state, and make a conclusion whether you can train, or if you should refrain from training for a while. In addition, you will learn how to act quickly in critical situations related to health, and gain skills in order to save your own or someone else's life.