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Eat a Chocolate Bar a Day

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Eat a Chocolate Bar a Day

Eating the right kind of chocolate bars can improve your health in a number of ways. It can even build muscle. Here's what you need to know. About 10 or 15 years ago, research came out suggesting that eating chocolate was good for you. It supposedly had something to do with positive effects on arachidonic acid metabolism and the health of the human heart.

People went nuts. Men and women who'd gone to great lengths to hide their Russell Stover assorted chocolates box for years could now store them openly on the same shelf as their spirulina. Citizens of Hershey, Pennsylvania rejoiced. Willy Wonka gave raises to all the Oompa Loompas and they all went on a weeklong bender.

People who took the advice to heart lived happily ever after. Until they died. Except for all the obesity, diabetes, and atherosclerosis in between.

As usual, the humans misinterpreted the information, ate lots of chocolate, and essentially invalidated what was initially good advice by growing less healthy instead of more healthy. The thing is, eating a chocolate bar every day can be hugely beneficial to human health in a number of ways, provided you're eating the right kinds of chocolate or chocolate bars. It can also have various bodybuilding benefits, too.

What's So Special About Chocolate?

Chocolate, or more specifically, the cocoa it's made from, is rich in a couple of particular sub-groupings of polyphenols (a class of plant chemicals). These sub-groupings of polyphenols in chocolate are known as flavan-3-ols and proanthocyanins and they can do terrific things for the human body, including the following:

  1. Lower your risk of dying from a host of diseases: Meta analyses of people who eat a lot of cocoa report a 37% lower risk of cardiovascular disease (five studies), a 31% reduction in diabetes (one study), and a 29% lower risk of stroke (three studies). Cocoa polyphenols help the cardiovascular system by reducing the incidence of arrhythmias and heart disease in general by lowering blood pressure and improving endothelial function, while its effects on diabetes relate to its ability to increase insulin sensitivity.
  2. Facilitate stronger erections: Cocoa augments nitric oxide (NO) levels, which in turn allows more blood to flow into the penis when sexually excited.
  3. Improve gut health: The flavan-3-ols in cocoa have been shown to increase butyrate, an anti-inflammatory compound that influences intestinal homeostasis and energy metabolism by improving intestinal barrier function and mucosal immunity. This qualifies cocoa as an actual pre-biotic food.
  4. Help grow muscle: Flavan-3-ols also inhibit myostatin, a factor that inhibits muscle growth, while simultaneously stimulating the production of follistatin, which functions to increase muscle growth.
  5. Act as a natural "nerve tonic": Cocoa is a proven neuro-protectant (it protects nerves from disease or chemical assault), along with improving nerve function and cognition.
So What's the Healthiest Type of Chocolate to Eat?
Years ago, pretty much your only choice was buying milk chocolate bars because Europeans ate dark chocolate and Americans ate milk chocolate, thank you very much, you commie bastard.

The trouble is, the darker varieties of chocolate are the healthful ones since they have a lot more of the juicy polyphenols we want, in addition to containing more caffeine, which acts synergistically with the polyphenols. The cocoa polyphenols increase the cognitive-enhancing effects of caffeine while simultaneously reducing its jitter-causing effects.

Old-fashioned American chocolate bars were also confectionerily jacked up with lots and lots of sugar, in addition to worrisome amounts of heart-gunky trans fat. As a result, they probably inadvertently negated any of the healthful effects of the limited amount of cocoa polyphenols they contained.

Some of the newer chocolate bars have fewer of these nutritional drawbacks. Play it safe, though, by looking for bars with the following properties:
  • It should be made with dark chocolate that contains at least 70% cocoa. Avoid milk chocolate.
  • It should have a short ingredient list, containing not much more than milk solids, lactose, casein, whey, and butter fat.
Luckily, many of the new keto chocolate bars on the market fit the bill and use, as a bonus, either natural sweeteners or no added sugars. Eating one (a small one) or half of a larger one every day should pose no problems and actually be healthful, as long as you take into consideration their high-fat content and make adjustments elsewhere in your diet.


Sources:
Ali Boolani, Jacob B. Lindheimer, Bryan D. Loy, Stephen. "Acute effects of brewed cocoa consumption on attention, motivation to perform cognitive work and feelings of anxiety, energy and fatigue: a randomized, placebo-controlled crossover experiment," BMC, 13 January 2017.
Frage, Cesar, et al. "The effects of polyphenols and other bioactives on human health." Food and Function, Issue 2, 2019.
Guitierrez-Salmean, Gabriela, et al. "Effects of epicatechin on molecular modulators of skeletal muscle growth and differentiation." The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 2014. PubMed, PMC.
Yu, PL. "Effects of catechin, epicatechin and epigallocatechin gallate on testosterone production in rat leydig cells." Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 2010. PubMed-NCBI.
 
Is Dark Chocolate a Bodybuilding Food?

Please say yes, please say yes. Actually, science is looking into it. Check out the research.

As hard-training athletes, we're constantly seeking out anything that can accelerate muscle and strength gains, or promote fat loss. Well, it's time to rejoice. Your latest salvation may come in the form of chocolate.

Say Hello To Epicatechin
The benefits derived from chocolate, dark chocolate in particular, are caused by the presence of a flavonol compound known as epicatechin. Epicatechin is a naturally occurring phytochemical present in dark chocolate and cacao.

Epicatechin may be able to boost muscle growth by inhibiting a protein found in muscles known as myostatin. Myostatin's primary function in the body is to inhibit muscle growth. Myostatin acts in direct opposition to another protein, follistatin, which functions to increase muscle growth. Epicatechin may be able to both inhibit myostatin and boost follistatin.

Epicatechin and T Levels
One study, conducted on rodents, determined that daily low-dose consumption of epicatechin increased serum testosterone levels via stimulation of the pituitary gland. The pituitary gland in turn stimulates release of GnRH (gonadotropin releasing hormone) and LH (luteinizing hormone). Luteinizing hormone then instructs the testes to increase T production.

While there's no guarantee that the effect will translate over to humans, it's interesting nonetheless, and future research will tell us more.

Epicatechin and Appetite
Researchers from the Netherlands found that epicatechin increases levels of the satiety hormone ghrelin, which can lower the appetite. This may explain the benefit of having a tiny bit of dark chocolate at night to prevent the munchies.

Epicatechin is also able to increase blood flow, making it easier to deliver nutrients integral for muscle growth, as well as testicular hormone synthesis. Increased levels of nitric oxide (the vasodilator responsible for improved blood flow) also favorably improved blood pressure levels, taking stress off the heart.

Epicatechin Dosage
One study conducted on middle-aged people used an epicatechin dose of 1 milligram per kilogram of bodyweight, taken two times daily. The effects were promising but the duration was short.

Anecdotal reports have indicated that people using double this amount also see good results. If you choose to go with dark chocolate itself, 40-50 grams daily should suffice. Make sure it contains at least 70% cocoa which will be stronger in epicatechin.

While the research still has years to go before we can draw any substantial conclusions on its beneficial effects, cocoa still has many favorable nutritional benefits: high mineral content (especially magnesium), healthy saturated fats, and a positive impact on dopamine.


References:
Effects of epicatechin on molecular modulators of skeletal muscle growth and differentiation. The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 2014. PubMed, PMC.
Effects of catechin, epicatechin and epigallocatechin gallate on testosterone production in rat leydig cells. Journal of Cellular Biochemistry, 2010. PubMed- NCBI.
Effect of dark chocolate on nitric oxide serum levels and blood pressure in prehypertension subjects. Acta medica Indonesiana, 2011. PubMed, NCBI.
 
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