- Don't get me started! There is a large body of
scientific evidence supportive of ZMA. Zinc and Magnesium are commonly
depleted from your body. Studies have shown that supplementing with 30mg of Zinc and 450mg
of Magnesium per day can elevate testosterone levels up to 30%!
The most talked about study is the following. Lorrie
Brilla, PhD, a sports performance researcher at Western Washington University, recently
reported that ZMA significantly increase free testosterone
levels and muscle strength in NCAA football players. These ZMA study results were
presented by Dr. Brilla on June 2, 1999, at the 46th Annual Meeting of the American
College of Sports Medicine in Seattle, WA, and were published in the official ACSM
journal, Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, Vol. 31, No. 5, May 1999.
Specifically, Brilla reported that "a group of
competitive NCAA football players who took ZMA nightly during an eight-week spring training program
had 2.5 times greater muscle strength gains than a placebo group. (250% better results!)
Pre and post leg strength measurements were made using a Biodex isokinetic
dynamometer." The strength of the ZMA group increased by 11.6% compared to only a
4.6% increase in the placebo group.
Basically, this means that if you went up 10 pounds
on your bench press in eight weeks without ZMA, you WOULD have went up 25 pounds in that
same period if you had been taking ZMA.