JCS3
JCS3 t1_j13pq31 wrote
If a muscle cell is not doing any work and is already full of glucose/glycogen it begins to down regulate the number of insulin receptors on its surface. Exercise causes muscle cells to use their glucose, creating a need for more glucose to find its way into those cells.
If your blood sugar is regularly high, all of your non-lipid cells begin to down regulate their insulin receptors, as again they don’t need the energy and apparently sugars are abundant. Lipid cells take excess glucose and convert it to fat to be released when glucose levels are low. By eating well, your blood sugar levels drop, and non-lipid cells start to up-regulate insulin receptors to ensure they have the energy they need to function.
JCS3 t1_j13y7qr wrote
Reply to comment by [deleted] in How and why do diet and lifestyle changes reverse insulin resistance? by derpderp3200
If you want to gain muscle you need to work your existing muscles to exhaustion/failure. This will stimulate repair and growth of new muscle cells. To facilitate this work you need to ensure you are getting protein as this is the main ingredient muscle cells. Cinnamon is not needed.
Blood sugar management while exercising is rarely a concern unless you have underlying blood sugar management issues or you are training for endurance.
If you are working out to lose weight high blood sugar is counter productive as your body will preferentially use glucose in your blood stream before it starts to use glycogen or stored fats for fuel. If you are working out to gain muscle, you are trying to exhaust the muscle, adding fuel doesn’t help you achieve that goal. The building of muscle takes place during the rest period, so it is at that point you might want to eat.