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Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Pre-Workout For Performance and Energy Fruit Punch -- 30 Servings


Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Pre-Workout For Performance and Energy Fruit Punch
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Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Pre-Workout For Performance and Energy Fruit Punch -- 30 Servings

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Save 20% off $100 Code OPTIMUM20 Ends: 12/23/24 at 7:00 a.m. ET

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  • Note: You must be at least 18 years of age to purchase this product.

Optimum Nutrition Gold Standard Pre-Workout For Performance and Energy Fruit Punch Description

  • For Performance, Energy, Focus, and Endurance
  • 175 mg Caffeine from Natural Sources
  • 3 g Creatine Monohydrate
  • 1.5 g Beta-Alanine
  • 750 mg Micronized L-Citrulline
  • Manufactured in the USA

ON's new Gold Standard Pre-Workout unleashes amplified energy, focus, and supports enhanced endurance to help you reach the pinnacle of your game, crush your next set, get that last rep, and achieve some true gains. Whatever your goals, accomplish them all with the pre-workout from the most trusted brand in sports nutrition.


Directions

  • 10 Grams - about 1 scoop Gold Standard Pre-Workout
  • 6-8 FL OZ Cold Water
  • 30 Seconds Mix Until Dissolved

 Consume Gold Standard Pre-Workout 15-30 minutes before physical activity.

 

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.


Supplement Facts
Serving Size: 1 Scoop (10 g)
Servings per Container: 30
Amount Per Serving% Daily Value
Calories5
Total Carbohydrate1 g1%
Vitamin D (as Cholecalciferol)12.5 mcg63%
Thiamin (as Thiamin HCl)2 mg167%
Niacin25 mg156%
Vitamin B6 (as Pyridoxine HCl)2 mg118%
Folate (200 mcg Folic Acid340 mcg DFE85%
Vitamin B12 (as Cyanocobalamin)10 mcg417%
Pantothenic Acid (as D-Calcium Pantothenate)10 mg200%
Calcium50 mg4%
Sodium20 mg1%
Muscle Matrix0
Creatine Monohydrate3 g*
AstraGIN® Proprietary Blend
[Panax notoginseng Extract (root) & Astragalus membranaceus Extract (root)]
25 mg*
Performance Composite0
Beta-Alanine (as CarnoSyn®)1.5 g*
L-Citrulline Micronized750 mg*
Energy & Focus Complex0
Acetyl L-Carnitine HCl375 mg*
N-Acetyl L-Tyrosine250 mg*
Caffeine175 mg*
Citrus Bioflavonoids100 mg*
*Daily value not established.
Other Ingredients: Natural and artificial flavors, citric acid, calcium silicate, silicon dioxide, caffeine (from tea and/or coffee bean), gum blend (cellulose gum, xanthan gum, carrageenan), sucralose, tartaric acid, malic acid, potassium, red #40.
Warnings

Consult your physician before using this product if you are taking any medications or are under a physician's care for a medical condition. Not for use by those under the age of 18. Women that are pregnant, trying to get pregnant, or nursing, or those that are sensitive to caffeine, niacin or beta-alanine. Do not consume caffeine from other sources while taking this product as too much caffeine may cause nervousness, irritability, sleeplessness, and occasionally rapid heartbeat. Beta-Alanine and niacin may cause a harmless, temporary tingling or flushing sensation.

 

Do not combine with alcohol. Consume as part of a healthy diet and exercise program, and drink at least 100 oz of water per day. Exercise may increase your need for fluid intake.

The product you receive may contain additional details or differ from what is shown on this page, or the product may have additional information revealed by partially peeling back the label. We recommend you reference the complete information included with your product before consumption and do not rely solely on the details shown on this page. For more information, please see our full disclaimer.
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Why Exercise is So Important - and How to Get Yourself to do it More Often

Sometimes in life, you can get too much of a good thing – unless you are exercising.

Researchers at the Cleveland Clinic recently found that the higher your level of cardiorespiratory fitness, the longer you are likely to live.

That conclusion stems from examining around 122,000 patients who underwent exercise treadmill testing, and who were broken up into five performance groups -- elite, high, above average, below average and low.

People who were extremely aerobically fit -- especially those 70 and older, and those diagnosed with high blood pressure -- received the greatest benefit from exercise, and lived the longest.

Woman Who Just Finished Working Out in Park Pondering Why is Exercise Important | Vitacost.com/blog

"We found in our study there is no limit to how much exercise is too much,” said cardiologist Dr. Wael Jaber in a Cleveland Clinic press release.

“Everyone should be encouraged to achieve and maintain high fitness levels,” said Wael, senior author of the study.

By contrast, poor cardiorespiratory fitness poses a risk of mortality comparable to -- or even exceeding --that of cardiovascular disease, diabetes and smoking.

Why is exercise important

Exercise helps keep your body running smoothly. That is especially true for the cardiorespiratory system, says Jonathan Ross, the Annapolis, Maryland-based creator of the fitness workout Funtensity and author of “Abs Revealed.”

"In broad terms, it makes your heart, lungs and blood -- your cardiorespiratory system -- do their jobs more effectively and efficiently for longer," Ross says.

For example, heart attacks occur when arterial plaques break off from arteries and create a blockage elsewhere. Exercise makes such plaques more stable and less likely to break off, Ross says.

Exercise also strengthens your heart muscle, reducing the risk of heart failure. 

"Exercise sends a powerful signal to many bodily systems and organs that says, 'Hey, I’m going to keep moving in challenging ways, so you’d better keep everything in working order,'" Ross says.

How to get moving

If you have struggled to exercise in the past, it probably makes sense to rachet back your expectations, at least initially.

Focusing on adhering to government recommendations for exercise -- 150 minutes per week of moderate intensity, or 75 minutes of vigorous intensity -- can be counterproductive for some people, Ross says.

"We get discouraged, since we don’t know what those intensities really mean, and we don’t how to break up the individual sessions," he says.

So, rather than pushing yourself to jump into an exercise program of 20 to 30 minutes per session, start with a basic five minutes of activity, or whatever feels manageable.

For example, take a long walk, and insert short bursts of time where you either just walk faster or jog. 

"The most important part is to get started," Ross says. "When you begin, you start the process of change."

Tips for making exercise fun

Getting started is half the battle in exercise. Continuing to remain engaged in your fitness routine is the other half.

If you find yourself bored or otherwise unhappy with exercise, try tricks such as:

Choose frequency over duration. It makes more sense for some people to exercise for 10 minutes a day six times a week than to exercise hard for 30 minutes a session once or twice a week.

Focus on something other than the activity. Ross says concentrating on something internal (such as your breath, muscles or posture) or external (cloud patterns, the shapes of leaves, sounds, animals such as birds and squirrels) can make exercise more pleasant.

"The saying 'time flies when you are having fun' applies here," Ross says.

Choose an activity that is fun. Too often, we decide to exercise in ways that don’t appeal to us. "Running for the sake of running really isn’t for everyone," Ross says.

Instead, pick an activity – from swimming to basketball to biking – that you want to do. “If there is a form of exercise you hate, you shouldn’t be doing it,” Ross says.

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