Jordan Feigenbaum

Jordan Feigenbaum, Founder of Barbell Medicine, has an academic background including a Bachelor of Science in Biology, Master of Science in Anatomy and Physiology, and Doctor of Medicine. Jordan also holds accreditations from many professional training organizations including the American College of Sports Medicine, National Strength and Conditioning Association, USA Weightlifting, CrossFit, and is a former Starting Strength coach and staff member. He’s been coaching folks from all over the world  for over a decade through Barbell Medicine. As a competitive powerlifter, Jordan has competition best lifts of a 640lb squat, 430lb bench press, 275lb overhead press, and 725lb deadlift as a 198lb raw lifter.

Why People on Ozempic Aren’t Eating Enough Protein, and What to Do About It

Real-world data show that adults on GLP-1 medications are hitting roughly 38% of the recommended protein target. The instructions for fixing that are not where most users are looking. Adults taking semaglutide and tirzepatide are eating about 0.6 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day. The new Dietary Guidelines for Americans recommend […]

Sarcopenia: What It Is and How to Prevent It

Medically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD · Reviewed quarterly Sarcopenia is not the age-related decline in muscle size most people think it is. It is a syndrome of low muscle strength and impaired physical function, and the process that produces it starts in the nervous system long before atrophy shows up on a scan or […]

Progressive Loading Part 3: The Death of the Novice-Intermediate-Advanced Framework

Scientifically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD, FACP In Chicago in 1944, in an army hospital ward at Gardiner General Hospital, Thomas DeLorme experimented with a rehabilitation approach his colleagues considered unorthodox. The patient was Sergeant Walter Easley, a paratrooper who had ruptured both his anterior cruciate ligament and his medial collateral ligament when he landed […]

Low Testosterone in Men: A Complete Evidence-Based Guide

Medically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD · Reviewed quarterly Based on Signal: What Testosterone Levels Are Telling You About Your Health Half. That is the share of men with an initial low testosterone value who come back normal on a repeat draw without any treatment. The finding comes from a long-running study of more than […]

Will You Gain the Weight Back When You Stop Ozempic?

Medically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD | Reviewed quarterly Two-thirds. That is approximately how much of the weight people regain within a year of stopping semaglutide, based on the STEP 1 trial extension.¹ The trial had produced an average weight loss of about 17% of body weight over 68 weeks. One year after the last […]

Creatine on Ozempic: Does It Prevent Muscle Loss?

Medically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD An evidence-based review of creatine supplementation during GLP-1–assisted weight loss. The Short Answer Creatine monohydrate is one of the best-studied supplements in sports nutrition, and its effects on body composition are modest. On a GLP-1, creatine will not prevent the lean-mass drop that shows up on a DXA scan, […]

GLP-1s and Muscle Loss: What the Evidence Shows

Medically reviewed by Austin Baraki, MD · Reviewed quarterly A clinical evidence review of muscle loss, body composition, and physical function during GLP-1–assisted weight loss. Thirty-eight to thirty-nine percent. That is the share of total weight lost that registered as “lean mass” on the body-composition scans in STEP-1, the landmark semaglutide trial published in the […]

Statin Myopathy and Exercise: Do Statins Damage Muscle in People Who Lift?

If you lift weights and take a statin, you may wonder whether the medication is working against your training. Muscle pain, slower recovery, or stalled progress can raise the question: is the statin the problem? This article explains how statins affect muscle, what the evidence shows about strength and hypertrophy, how to interpret symptoms, and […]

Are You Really Overtrained? What the Evidence Actually Shows

After two decades of research, no controlled study has ever produced overtraining syndrome under experimental conditions. Here is what that means, and what to do when your training is actually not working. 0 controlled studies have successfully produced overtraining syndrome under experimental conditions. Based on the research summary presented in this article There is a […]

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