Saturday, June 6, 2009

Product Review - TRAC Extreme NO

Nitric Oxide (NO) production can accelerate long-term gains in muscle accrual, since arterial wall expansion can in addition to insulin-mimickers increase the macronutrient saturation point required for skeletal muscle cells to process nitrogen and related amino group components. Not only is this helpful, but it's a requirement, for the reason that all nutrient distribution and transfer takes place in the bloodstream. This also alerts users to the fact that purifying the blood stream with liver detoxification supplements and those for nephron health in the kidneys (i.e., cranberry and sufficient water intake) is also necessary for optimal protein absorption, amino acid assimilation, byproduct removal. TRAC can assist users strategically by increasing the capacity of the body's cardiac system, thus resulting also in increased blood volume, which in turn carries more macronutrients.

What makes this product's case interesting is the point at which the above is designed to occur: pre-training and training phases. By assisting the body in expanding the arterial wall in response to train intensity and duration, the product's stimulatory mechanism allows users to exert greater effort, which entices the body to expand its cardiac capacity in synergy with increased NO concentration. Consistent use over time can create a self reinforcing viral that extends NO production and cardiac expansion fairly quickly maxing out at one's genetic limit. Therefore, TRAC should not have its focus steered towards indefinite NO production, but more towards sufficient NO production necessary to allow the body's increased blood volume to carry more protein into the tissues than what would have occurred without using the product.

In the pursuit of lean mass gain, keep in mind that NO products are really what I call carrier supplements whose strategic value lies in their ability to biologically set up conditions that increase the distribution, transfer, absorption, and assimilation of macronutrients needed to process muscle. TRAC tactically focuses more on the first two processes, allowing the body to better manage the execution of the last two.

TRAC Extreme NO

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