FUSION BODYBUILDING

Bodybuilding’s Strongest Supplements

SUB•Q
Real-World Tested, Competition-Proven. Get Beyond Ripped

The Science Behind SUB•Q

SUB•Q® is designed to retain your hard-earned muscle while incinerating body fat, including subcutaneous fat – making your skin paper-thin. To do this, SUB•Q stimulates cellular energy production1 and norepinephrine release,2 and this increases your metabolic rate and the number of calories that you burn from fat. By increasing your metabolic rate, you incinerate existing body and subcutaneous fat, and continuing to take SUB•Q helps you keep it off for good. By maintaining a positive nitrogen balance, promoting muscle sparing3 and promoting muscle growth,4,5 SUB•Q keeps your metabolism high, accelerates your recovery time and allows you to exercise with increased frequency. This all amounts to more calorie burning and the incineration of fat. Also, to really thin your skin, SUB•Q contains strong diuretic properties that eliminates excess water from underneath your skin.6 This is a bodybuilding must and will really make your muscles “pop.”

Subcutaneous fat levels before and after SUB•Q cycling
The diagram above illustrates the difference in subcutaneous fat levels before and after the SUB•Q cycle.

Bullet Caplet Technology®

To ensure your results are explosive, SUB•Q’s powerful formula is transported with Bullet Caplet Technology.

Bullet Caplet Technology stages
The 3-Stage Disintegration Process

Bullet Caplet Technology is a proprietary innovation exclusive to FUSION BODYBUILDING®. What makes this technology unique is its micro-channels. During the disintegration process, these micro-channels are created in the Bullet Caplet structure, and the ingredients in SUB•Q are released from the inside of the caplet to the outside, dissolving it from the center. This allows immediate and accurate dosing, making sure the ingredients work together as designed.

Scientific References

  1. Kimball, S. R., & Jefferson, L. S. (2001, January). Regulation of protein synthesis by branched chain amino acids. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care, 4(1), 39–43. Review.
  2. Torigoe, K., Potter, P. E., & Katz D. P. (1999). Branched-chain amino acid-induced hippocampal norepinephrine release is antagonized by picrotoxin: Evidence for a central mode of action. Brain Res Bull, 49(4), 281–284. (31 ref.)
  3. Combaret, L., et al. (2005, December). A leucine-supplemented diet restores the defective postprandial inhibition of proteasome-dependant proteolysis in aged rat skeletal muscle. J Physiol, 1(569[Pt 2]), 489–99.
  4. Biolo, G., Tipton, K. D., Klein, S., & Wolfe, R. R. (1997, July). An abundant supply of amino acids enhances the metabolic effect of exercise on muscle protein. Am J Physiol, 273(1 Pt 1), E122–9.
  5. Anthony, J. C., et al. (2002, May ). Contribution of insulin to the translational control of protein synthesis in skeletal muscle by leucine. Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab, 282(5), E1092–101.
  6. Racz-Kotilla, E., Racz, G., & Solomon, A. (1974). The action of Taraxacum officinale extracts on the body weight and diureses of laboratory animals. Planta Med, 26, 212–217.