Eat your greens: The leafy side dish contains a potent antioxidant and unbeatable anti-inflammatory qualities
Popeye,
you’re busted! FLEX Magazine readers now know how you got those bulging
forearms: sulforaphane, an anti-cancer compound found not in spinach,
but in cruciferous vegetables, including—and especially—broccoli, which appears to have general but potent antioxidant and possibly anti-inflammatory qualities. Previous
studies have shown that broccoli extract’s powerful anti-inflammatory
action reduced muscle damage. Now, in a study examining cell cultures,
researchers have found that sulforaphane reduces myostatin levels in
muscle cell dishes, where satellite cells function as skeletal muscle
stem cells to support muscle growth and regeneration following injury.
Interestingly, the study noted a significant reduction in MyoD mRNA
levels at 10uM concentration in these satellite cells. Translated into
real-world bodybuilding terms, you’d have to eat a ton of broccoli every
day to achieve these blood levels naturally. However, taking a
sulforaphane supplement may be a realistic way to achieve these levels.
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