Strength training
Strength training is the use of resistance to muscular contraction to build the strength, anaerobic endurance and size of skeletal muscles. There are many different methods of strength training, the most common being the use of gravity or elastic/hydraulic forces to oppose muscle contraction. See the resistance training article for information about elastic/hydraulic training, but note that the terms "strength training" and "resistance training" are often used interchangeably.
When properly performed, strength training can provide significant functional benefits and improvement in overall health and well-being, including increased bone, muscle, tendon and ligament strength and toughness, improved joint function, reduced potential for injury, increased bone density, a temporary increase in metabolism, improved cardiac function, and elevated HDL (good) cholesterol. Training commonly uses the technique of progressively increasing the force output of the muscle through incremental increases of weight, elastic tension or other resistance, and uses a variety of exercises and types of equipment to target specific muscle groups. Strength training is primarily an anaerobic activity, although some proponents have adapted it to provide the benefits of aerobic exercise through circuit training.
Strength training differs from bodybuilding, weightlifting, powerlifting, and strongman, which are sports rather than forms of exercise, although training for them is inherently interconnected with strength training, as it is for shotput, discus, and Highland games. Many other sports use strength training as part of their training regimen, notably football, lacrosse, basketball, rugby, hockey and track and field.
History
Until the 20th century, the history of strength training was essentially a history of weight training. With the advent of modern technology, materials and knowledge, the methods that can be used for strength training have multiplied significantly.
Hippocrates explained the principle behind strength training when he wrote "that which is used develops, and that which is not used wastes away", referring to muscular hypertrophy and atrophy. Progressive resistance training dates back at least to Ancient Greece, when legend has it that wrestler Milo of Croton trained by carrying a newborn calf on his back every day until it was fully grown. Another Greek, the physician Galen, described strength training exercises using the halteres (an early form of dumbbell) in the 2nd century. Ancient Persians used the meels, which became popular during the 19th century as the Indian club, and has recently made a comeback in the form of the clubbell.
The dumbbell was joined by the barbell in the latter half of the 19th century. Early barbells had hollow globes that could be filled with sand or lead shot, but by the end of the century these were replaced by the plate-loading barbell commonly used today.[1]
Strength training with isometric exercise was popularised by Charles Atlas from the 1930s onwards. The 1960s saw the gradual introduction of exercise machines into the still-rare strength training gyms of the time. Strength training became increasingly popular in the 1980s following the release of the bodybuilding movie Pumping Iron and the subsequent popularity of Arnold Schwarzenegger. Since the late 1990s increasing numbers of women have taken up strength training, influenced by programs like Body for Life; currently nearly one in five U.S. women engages in weight training on a regular basis.[2]
Types of strength training
Weight training
Weight and resistance training are popular methods of strength training that use gravity (through weight stacks, plates or dumbbells) or elastic/hydraulic resistance to oppose muscle contraction. Each method provides a different challenge to the muscle relating to the position where the resistance to muscle contraction peaks. Weight training provides the majority of the resistance at the initiating joint angle when the movement begins, when the muscle must overcome the inertia of the weight's mass (however, if repetitions are performed extremely slowly, inertia is never overcome and resistance remains constant). In contrast, elastic resistance provides the greatest opposition to contraction at the end of the movement when the material experiences the greatest tension while hydraulic resistance varies depending on the speed of the submerged limb, with greater resistance at higher speeds. In addition to the equipment used, joint angles can alter the force output of the muscles due to leverage.
Resistance training
Resistance training is a form of strength training in which each effort is performed against a specific opposing force generated by resistance (i.e. resistance to being pushed, squeezed, stretched or bent). Exercises are isotonic if a body part is moving against the force. Exercises are isometric if a body part is holding still against the force. Resistance exercise is used to develop the strength and size of skeletal muscles. Properly performed, resistance training can provide significant functional benefits and improvement in overall health and well-being.
The goal of resistance training, according to the American Sports Medicine Institute (ASMI), is to "gradually and progressively overload the musculoskeletal system so it gets stronger." Research shows that regular resistance training will strengthen muscle and increase bone mass.
Isometric training
Isometric exercise, or "isometrics", is a type of strength training in which the joint angle and muscle length do not change during contraction. Isometric exercises are opposed by a force equal to the force output of the muscle and there is no net movement. This mainly strengthens the muscle at the specific joint angle at which the isometric exercise occurs, with some increases in strength at joint angles up to 20° in either direction depending on the joint trained.[3] In comparison, isotonic exercises strengthen the muscle throughout the entire range of motion of the exercise used.
Basic principles
The basic principles of strength training involve a manipulation of the number of repetitions (reps), sets, tempo, exercises and force to cause desired changes in strength, endurance, size or shape by overloading of a group of muscles. The specific combinations of reps, sets, exercises, resistance and force depend on the purpose of the individual performing the exercise: sets with fewer reps can be performed using more force, but have a reduced impact on endurance.
Strength training also requires the use of 'good form', performing the movements with the appropriate muscle group(s), and not transferring the weight to different body parts in order to move greater weight/resistance (called 'cheating'). Typically failure to use good form during a training set can result in injury or an inability to meet training goals - since the desired muscle group is not challenged sufficiently, the threshold of overload is never reached and the muscle does not gain in strength. There are cases when cheating is beneficial, as is the case where weaker groups become the weak link in the chain and the target muscles are never fully exercised as a result.
The benefits of strength training include increased muscle, tendon and ligament strength, bone density, flexibility, tone, metabolic rate and postural support.
Terminology
Strength training has a variety of specialized terms used to describe parameters of strength training:
- Exercise - different exercises involve moving joints in specific patterns to challenge muscles in different ways
- Form - each exercise has a specific form, a topography of movement designed to maximize safety and muscle strength gains
- Rep - short for repetition, a rep is a single cycle of lifting and lowering a weight in a controlled manner, moving through the form of the exercise
- Set - a set consists of several repetitions performed one after another with no break between them with the number of reps per set and sets per exercise depending on the goal of the individual. The number of repetitions one can perform at a certain weight is called the Rep Maximum (RM). For example, if one could perform ten reps at 75 lbs, then their RM for that weight would be 10RM. 1RM is therefore the maximum weight that someone can lift in a given exercise - i.e. a weight that they can only lift once without a break.
- Tempo - the speed with which an exercise is performed; the tempo of a movement has implications for the weight that can be moved and the effects on the muscle.
Realization of training goals
According to popular theory:
- Sets of one to five repetitions primarily develop strength, with less impact on muscle size and none on endurance.
- Sets of six to twelve repetitions develop a balance of strength, muscle size and endurance.
- Sets of thirteen to twenty repetitions develop endurance, with some increases to muscle size and limited impact on strength.[4]
- Sets of more than twenty repetitions are considered to be focused on aerobic exercise. They do still use the anaerobic system, but usually at a rate through which it can consistently remove the lactic acid generated from it.
Individuals typically perform one to six sets per exercise, and one to three exercises per muscle group, with short breaks between each set - the specific combinations of reps, exercises, sets and break duration depends on the goals of the individual program. The duration of these breaks determines which energy system the body utilizes. Performing a series of exercises with little or no rest between them, referred to as "circuit training", will draw energy mostly from the aerobic energy system. Brief bursts of exercise, separated by breaks, are fueled by anaerobic systems, which use either phosphagens or glycolysis.
For developing endurance, gradual increases in volume and gradual decreases in intensity is the most effective program.[5]
It has been shown that for beginners, multiple-set training offers minimal benefits over single-set training with respect to either strength gain or muscle mass increase, but for the experienced athlete multiple-set systems are required for optimal progress.[4][6][7] However, one study shows that for leg muscles, three sets are more effective than one set.[8]
Beginning weight-trainers are in the process of training the neurological aspects of strength[citation needed], the ability of the brain to generate a rate of neuronal action potentials that will produce a muscular contraction that is close to the maximum of the muscle's potential.
Variable | Training goal | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
Strength | Power | Hypertrophy | Endurance | |
Load (% of 1RM) | 80-90 | 70-90 | 60-80 | 40-60 |
Reps per set | 1-5 | 1-5 | 6-12 | 15-60 |
Sets per exercise | 4-7 | 3-5 | 4-8 | 2-4 |
Rest between sets (mins) | 2-6 | 2-6 | 2-5 | 1-2 |
Duration (seconds per set) | 5-10 | 4-8 | 20-60 | 80-150 |
Speed per rep (% of max) | 60-100 | 90-100 | 60-90 | 60-80 |
Training sessions per week | 3-6 | 3-6 | 5-7 | 8-14 |
Table reproduced from Siff, 2003[9] |
Weights for each exercise should be chosen so that the desired number of repetitions can just be achieved.
Progressive overload
In one common method, weight training uses the principle of progressive overload, in which the muscles are overloaded by attempting to lift at least as much weight as they are capable of. They respond by growing larger and stronger.[10] This procedure is repeated with progressively heavier weights as the practitioner gains strength and endurance.
However, performing exercises at the absolute limit of one's strength (known as one rep max lifts) is considered too risky for all but the most experienced practitioners. Moreover, most individuals wish to develop a combination of strength, endurance and muscle size. One repetition sets are not well suited to these aims. Practitioners therefore lift lighter (sub-maximal) weights, with more repetitions, to fatigue the muscle and all fibres within that muscle as required by the progressive overload principle. Recent research, conducted at the University of North Carolina, suggests that completing sets of thirty to fifty repetitions using 10% of 1-rep maximum weight provides optimum development of endurance, strength, and power.[citation needed]
Commonly, each exercise is continued to the point of momentary muscular failure. Contrary to widespread belief, this is not the point at which the individual thinks they cannot complete any more repetitions, but rather the first repetition that fails due to inadequate muscular strength. Training to failure is a controversial topic with some advocating training to failure on all sets while others believe that this will lead to overtraining, and suggest training to failure only on the last set of an exercise.[11] Some practitioners recommend finishing a set of repetitions just before the point of failure; e.g. if you can do a maximum of 12 reps with a given weight, only perform 11. Adrenaline and other hormones may promote additional intensity by stimulating the body to lift additional weight (as well as the neuro-muscular stimulations that happen when in “fight-or-flight” mode, as the body activates more muscle fibres), so getting "psyched up" before a workout can increase the maximum weight lifted.
Weight training can be a very effective form of strength training because exercises can be chosen, and weights precisely adjusted, to safely exhaust each individual muscle group after the specific numbers of sets and repetitions that have been found to be the most effective for the individual. Other strength training exercises lack the flexibility and precision that weights offer.
Split training
Split training involves working no more than three muscle groups or body parts per day, instead spreading the training of specific body parts throughout a training cycle of several days. It is commonly used by more advanced practitioners due to the logistics involved in training all muscle groups maximally. Training all the muscles in the body individually through their full range of motion in a single day is generally not considered possible due to caloric and time constraints. Split training involves fully exhausting individual muscle groups during a workout, then allowing several days for the muscle to fully recover. Muscles are worked roughly twice per week and allowed roughly 72 hours to recover. Recovery of certain muscle groups is usually achieved on days while training other groups. I.e. a 7 day week can consist of a practitioner training trapezius, side shoulders and upper shoulders to exhaustion on one day, the following day the arms to exhaustion, the day after that the rear, front shoulders and back, the day after that the chest. In this way all mentioned muscle groups are allowed the necessary recovery.[12]
Intensity, volume, and frequency
Three important variables of strength training are intensity, volume and frequency. Intensity refers to the amount of work required to achieve the activity, and is proportional to the mass of the weights being lifted. Volume refers to the number of muscles worked, exercises, sets and reps during a single session. Frequency refers to how many training sessions are performed per week.
These variables are important because they are all mutually conflicting, as the muscle only has so much strength and endurance, and takes time to recover due to microtrauma. Increasing one by any significant amount necessitates the decrease of the other two, eg. increasing weight means a reduction of reps, and will require more recovery time and therefore fewer workouts per week. Trying to push too much intensity, volume and frequency will result in overtraining, and eventually lead to injury and other health issues such as chronic soreness and general lethargy, illness or even acute trauma such as avulsion fractures. A high-medium-low formula can be used to avoid overtraining, with either intensity, volume, or frequency being high, one of the others being medium, and the other being low. One example of this training strategy can be found in the following chart:
Type | Low | Med | High |
---|---|---|---|
Intensity (% of 1RM) | 10-40% | 50-70% | 80-100% |
Volume (per muscle) | 1 exercise | 2 exercises | 3+ exercises |
Sets | 1 set | 2-3 sets | 4+ sets |
Reps | 1-6 reps | 8-15 reps | 20+ reps |
Session Frequency | 1 p/w | 2-3 p/w | 4+ p/w |
A common training strategy is to set the volume and frequency the same each week (eg. training 3 times per week, with 2 sets of 12 reps each workout), and steadily increase the intensity (weight) on a weekly basis. However, to maximize progress to specific goals, individual programs may require different manipulations, such as decreasing the weight, and increase volume or frequency.[13]
Making program alterations on a daily basis (daily undulating periodization) seems to be more efficient in eliciting strength gains than doing so every 4 weeks (linear periodization),[14] but for beginners there are no differences between different periodization models.[15]
Periodization
Periodization is the modulating of volume and intensity over time, to both stimulate gains and allow recovery. Commonly, volume is decreased during a training cycle while intensity is increased. In this template, a lifter would begin a training cycle with a higher rep range than he will finish with. For example, a lifter might begin a training program performing sets with 8 reps. Throughout the course of his/her training program, the lifter will slowly increase the weight while slowly decreasing the reps. This is enough time for the neuromuscular system to adapt and become more efficient.
For this example, the lifter has a 1 rep max of 225 lb:
Week | Set 1 | Set 2 | Set 3 | Set 4 | Set 5 | Volume Lbs. | Peak Intensity(Last Set) | % of 1 Rep Max(Last Set) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 95 lb x 8reps | 100 lb x 8reps | 110 lb x 8reps | 115 lb x 8reps | 120 lb x 8reps | 4,320 | 73% | 52.5% |
2 | 105 lb x 8reps | 110 lb x 7reps | 115 lb x 7reps | 125 lb x 7reps | 130 lb x 7reps | 4,200 | 79% | 57.75% |
3 | 110 lb x 7reps | 120 lb x 7reps | 125 lb x 6reps | 135 lb x 6reps | 140 lb x 6reps | 4,010 | 84% | 63% |
4 | 125 lb x 6reps | 130 lb x 6reps | 140 lb x 6reps | 145 lb x 5reps | 155 lb x 5reps | 3,870 | 88% | 68.25% |
5 | 130 lb x 5reps | 140 lb x 5reps | 150 lb x 5reps | 155 lb x 5reps | 165 lb x 4reps | 3,535 | 94% | 73.5% |
6 | 140 lb x 4reps | 150 lb x 4reps | 160 lb x 4reps | 165 lb x 4reps | 175 lb x 4reps | 3,160 | 99% | 79% |
This is an example of periodization where the volume decreases while the intensity and weight increases.
Benefits
This section needs additional citations for verification. (February 2008) |
The benefits of weight training include greater muscular strength, improved muscle tone and appearance, increased endurance, enhanced bone density, and improved cardiovascular fitness.
Many people take up weight training to improve their physical attractiveness. Most men can develop substantial muscles; most women lack the testosterone to do it, but they can develop a firm, "toned" (see below) physique, and they can increase their strength by the same proportion as that achieved by men (but usually from a significantly lower starting point). An individual's genetic make-up dictates the response to weight training stimuli to some extent.
The body's basal metabolic rate increases with increases in muscle mass[citation needed], which promotes long-term fat loss and helps dieters avoid yo-yo dieting.[16][dubious – discuss] Moreover, intense workouts elevate metabolism for several hours following the workout, which also promotes fat loss.[17]
Weight training also provides functional benefits. Stronger muscles improve posture, provide better support for joints, and reduce the risk of injury from everyday activities. Older people who take up weight training can prevent some of the loss of muscle tissue that normally accompanies aging—and even regain some functional strength—and by doing so become less frail.[citation needed] They may be able to avoid some types of physical disability. Weight-bearing exercise also helps to prevent osteoporosis. The benefits of weight training for older people have been confirmed by studies of people who began engaging in it even in their 80s and 90s.
Strength training helps to maintain good flexibility. The ability of the body to resist the stresses that can result from an injury can be increased by obtaining a greater amount of strength. That is true in the athletic world and it has its advantages in performing everyday activities, such as lifting or carrying objects. Strength contributes to the overall efficiency of the human body. Starting a strength training program means you have started a new lifestyle because strength is reversible. It will decline if you do not continue to obtain a strength stimulus throughout your entire life.[18]
Stronger muscles improve performance in a variety of sports. Sport-specific training routines are used by many competitors. These often specify that the speed of muscle contraction during weight training should be the same as that of the particular sport.
Though weight training can stimulate the cardiovascular system, many exercise physiologists, based on their observation of maximal oxygen uptake, argue that aerobics training is a better cardiovascular stimulus. Central catheter monitoring during resistance training reveals increased cardiac output, suggesting that strength training shows potential for cardiovascular exercise. However, a 2007 meta-analysis found that, though aerobic training is an effective therapy for heart failure patients, combined aerobic and strength training is ineffective.[19]
One side-effect of any intense exercise is increased levels of dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine, which can help to improve mood and counter feelings of depression.[20]
Common concerns
This section contains instructions, advice, or how-to content. (July 2009) |
Bodybuilding
Bodybuilding is a sport in which the goal is to increase muscle size and definition. Famous competitors include Steve Reeves, Sergio Oliva, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Lou Ferrigno and Ronnie Coleman. Bodybuilding increases the endurance of muscles, as well as strength, though not as much as if it were the primary goal. Bodybuilders compete in bodybuilding competitions, and use specific principles and methods of strength training to maximize muscular size and develop extremely low levels of body fat. In contrast, most strength trainers train to improve their strength and endurance while not giving special attention to reducing body fat below normal. Strength trainers tend to focus on compound exercises to build basic strength, whereas bodybuilders often use isolation exercises to visually separate their muscles, and to improve muscular symmetry. Pre-contest training for bodybuilders is different again, in that they attempt to retain as much muscular tissue as possible while undergoing severe dieting. However, the bodybuilding community has been the source of many strength training principles, techniques, vocabulary, and customs.
Bodybuilding, strongman competitions and other sports are illustrations of how the basic principles and methods of strength training can be applied to achieve very different goals.
Nutrition
It is widely accepted that strength training must be matched by changes in diet in order to be effective. Adequate protein is generally believed to be required for building skeletal muscle with popular sources advising weight trainers to consume a high protein diet with from 1.4 to 3.3 g of protein per kg of body weight per day (0.6 to 1.5 g per pound).[21][22] Protein that is neither needed for cell growth and repair nor consumed for energy is converted by the liver into fat, which is then stored in the body. Some people believe that a high protein diet entails risk of kidney damage, but studies have shown that kidney problems only occur in people with previous kidney disease. Nonetheless, the deamination process creates urea, which places low, but consistent, strain on the nephrons. Failure to properly hydrate can result in an exaggeration of this effect. [23] [24] An adequate supply of carbohydrates (5-7g per kg) is also needed as a source of energy and for the body to restore glycogen levels in muscles. [25]
A light, balanced meal prior to the workout (usually one to two hours beforehand) ensures that adequate energy and amino acids are available for the intense bout of exercise. The type of nutrients consumed affects the response of the body, and nutrient timing whereby protein and carbohydrates are consumed prior to and after workout has a beneficial impact on muscle growth.[26] Water is consumed throughout the course of the workout to prevent poor performance due to dehydration.[27] A protein shake is often consumed immediately[28] following the workout, because both protein uptake and protein usage are increased at this time.[29] Glucose (or another simple sugar) is often consumed as well since this quickly replenishes any glycogen lost during the exercise period. To maximise muscle protein anabolism, recovery drink should contain glucose (dextrose), protein (usually whey) hydrosylate containing mainly dipeptides and tripeptides, and leucine.[30] Some weight trainers also take ergogenic aids such as creatine or steroids to aid muscle growth. However, the effectiveness of some products is disputed and others are potentially harmful.
Sex differences in mass gains
Due to the androgenic hormonal differences between males and females, the latter are generally unable to develop large muscles regardless of the training program used.[31] Normally the most that can be achieved is a look similar to that of a fitness model. Muscle is denser than fat, so someone who builds muscle while keeping the same body weight will occupy less volume; if two people weigh the same (and are the same height) but have different lean body mass percentages, the one with more muscle will appear thinner.[32]
The results obtained by female bodybuilders are extremely atypical: they are self-selected for their genetic ability to build muscle,[citation needed] perform enormous amounts of exercise, their musculature is exaggerated by very low body fat, and like many male bodybuilders their results may be enhanced by anabolic steroids.[33] Unless a woman dedicates her life to bodybuilding, she will not achieve the same results as a professional male bodybuilder. In addition, though bodybuilding uses the same principles as strength training, it is with a goal of gaining muscle bulk. Strength trainers with different goals and programs will not gain the same mass as a male professional bodybuilder.
Muscle toning
Some weight trainers perform light, high-repetition exercises in an attempt to "tone" their muscles without increasing their size. The use of the word "tone" in this sense is inaccurate. Muscle tone correctly refers to the constant, low-frequency contractions that occur in all muscles, even at "rest", to prepare them for future activity.
What muscle builders refer to as a toned physique is one that combines reasonable muscular size with moderate levels of body fat, qualities that may result from a combination of diet and exercise. Exercises of 6-12 reps indeed do cause hypertrophy of the sarcoplasm in slow-twitch and high-twitch muscle fibers, contributing to overall increased muscle bulk. This is not to be confused with myofibril hypertrophy which leads to lifting gains. Both however can occur to an extent during this rep range.
Lowered-calorie diets have no positive effect on muscle hypertrophy for muscle of any fiber type. They may, however, decrease the thickness of subcutaneous fat (fat between muscle and skin), through an overall reduction in body fat, thus making muscle striations more visible.
Safety concerns related to children
Orthopaedic specialists used to recommend that children avoid weight training because the growth plates on their bones might be at risk. The very rare reports of growth plate fractures in children who trained with weights occurred as a result of inadequate supervision, improper form or excess weight, and there have been no reports of injuries to growth plates in youth training programs that followed established guidelines.[34][35] The position of the National Strength and Conditioning Association is that strength training is safe for children if properly designed and supervised.[36]
Younger children are at greater risk of injury than adults if they drop a weight on themselves or perform an exercise incorrectly; further, they may lack understanding of, or ignore the safety precautions around weight training equipment. As a result, supervision of minors is considered vital to ensuring the safety of any youth engaging in strength training.[34][35]
Weight loss
An exercise like sit-ups or abdominal crunches uses a much smaller volume of muscle than whole-body aerobic exercise[37] and is therefore less efficient at burning calories than an exercise like jogging. Instead, high-weight and low-rep exercises can be used to maintain or increase the body's muscle mass while dieting. They help to prevent the metabolic slowdown that otherwise often limits the effect of dieting and causes post-diet weight gain.[38]
Weight loss also depends on the type of strength training used. Weight training is generally used for bulking, but the bulking method will more than likely not increase weight because of the diet involved. However, when resistance or circuit training is used, because they are not geared towards bulking, women tend to lose weight more quickly. Lean muscles require calories to maintain themselves at rest, which will help reduce fat through an increase in the basal metabolic rate.
Safety
Strength training is a safe form of exercise when the movements are controlled, and carefully defined. However, as with any form of exercise, improper execution and the failure to take appropriate precautions can result in injury.
Methods and equipment
A number of strength training methods exist, each with its own goals, equipment and results. Apart from weight training, they include isometric exercise, plyometrics, Pilates or Super Slow.
Exercise equipment used for strength training includes weight machines, resistance bands, Swiss balls or Wobble boards, Indian clubs or weighted clothing.
Aerobic exercise versus anaerobic exercise
Strength training exercise is primarily anaerobic.[39] Even while training at a lower intensity (training loads of ~20-RM), anaerobic glycolysis is still the major source of power, although aerobic metabolism makes a small contribution.[40] Weight training is commonly perceived as anaerobic exercise, because one of the more common goals is to increase strength by lifting heavy weights. Other goals such as rehabilitation, weight loss, body shaping, and bodybuilding often use lower weights, adding aerobic character to the exercise.
Except in the extremes, a muscle will fire fibres of both the aerobic or anaerobic types on any given exercise, in varying ratio depending on the load on the intensity of the contraction.[7] This is known as the energy system continuum. At higher loads, the muscle will recruit all muscle fibres possible, both anaerobic ("fast-twitch") and aerobic ("slow-twitch"), in order to generate the most force. However, at maximum load, the anaerobic processes contract so forcefully that the aerobic fibers are completely shut out, and all work is done by the anaerobic processes. Because the anaerobic muscle fibre uses its fuel faster than the blood and intracellular restorative cycles can resupply it, the maximum number of repetitions is limited.[41] In the aerobic regime, the blood and intracellular processes can maintain a supply of fuel and oxygen, and continual repetition of the motion will not cause the muscle to fail.
Circuit weight training is a form of exercise that uses a number of weight training exercise sets separated by short intervals. The cardiovascular effort to recover from each set serves a function similar to an aerobic exercise, but this is not the same as saying that a weight training set is itself an aerobic process.
Exercises for specific muscle groups
Weight trainers commonly divide the body's individual muscles into ten major muscle groups. These do not include the hip, neck and forearm muscles, which are rarely trained in isolation. The most common exercises for these muscle groups are listed below. (Videos of these and other exercises are available at exrx.net and from the University of Wisconsin.)
The sequence shown below is one possible way to order the exercises. The large muscles of the lower body are normally trained before the smaller muscles of the upper body, because these first exercises require more mental and physical energy. The core muscles of the torso are trained before the shoulder and arm muscles that assist them. Exercises often alternate between "pushing" and "pulling" movements to allow their specific supporting muscles time to recover. The stabilising muscles in the waist should be trained last.
Advanced techniques
A number of techniques have been developed to make weight training exercises more intense, and thereby potentially increase the rate of progress. Many weight lifters use these techniques to bring themselves past a plateau, a duration where a weightlifter may be unable to do more lifting repetitions, sets, or use higher weight resistance.
Set structure
- Drop sets
- Drop sets do not end at the point of momentary muscular failure, but continue with progressively lighter weights.
- Pyramid sets
- In a pyramid the weight is first increased, and then decreased over a series of sets. A full pyramid typically includes five sets of approximately 12, 10, 8, 10 and 12 reps. The first two sets are performed with light to medium weights to warm up the muscles. The middle set is the work set, and uses the heaviest weight possible. The last two sets are drop sets, and further fatigue the muscle with progressively lighter weights. This technique provides a combination of volume and intensity, and is therefore popular with bodybuilders. However, the full pyramid may be too much for a beginner to handle, so it is only recommended for experienced trainers.
- Burnouts
- Burnouts combine pyramids and drop sets, working up to higher weights with low reps and then back down to lower weights and high reps.
- Diminishing set
- The diminishing set method is where a weight is chosen that can be lifted for 20 reps in one set, and then 70 repetitions are performed in as few sets as possible.[42]
- Rest-pause (heavy singles)
- Rest-pause heavy singles are performed at or near 1RM, with ten to twenty seconds of rest between each lift.[43] The lift is repeated six to eight times. It is generally recommended to use this method infrequently.
- Giant set
- The Giant set, is a form of training that targets one muscle group (e.g. the triceps) with three separate exercises performed in quick succession, often to fail and sometimes with the reduction of weight halfway through a set once muscle fatigue sets in. This form of intense training 'shocks' the muscles and as such, is usually performed by experienced trainers and should be used infrequently.
Combined sets
- Supersets
- Supersets combine two or more exercises with similar motions to maximize the amount of work of an individual muscle or group of muscles. The exercises are performed with no rest period between the exercises. An example would be doing bench press, which predominantly works the pectoralis and triceps muscles, and then moving to an exercise that works just the triceps such as the triceps extension or the pushdown.
- Push-pull supersets
- Push-pull supersets are similar to regular supersets, but exercises are chosen which work opposing muscle groups. This is especially popular when applied to arm exercises, for example by combining biceps curls with the triceps pushdown. Other examples include the shoulder press and lat pulldown combination, and the bench press and wide grip row combination.
- Pre-exhaustion
- Pre-exhaustion combines an isolation exercise with a compound exercise for the same muscle group. The isolation exercise first exhausts the muscle group, and then the compound exercise uses the muscle group's supporting muscles to push it further than would otherwise be possible. For example, the triceps muscles normally help the pectorals perform their function. But in the "bench press" the weaker triceps often fails first, which limits the impact on the pectorals. By preceding the bench press with the pec fly, the pectorals can be pre-exhausted so that both muscles fail at the same time, and both benefit equally from the exercise.
- Breakdowns
- Breakdowns were developed by Fred Hatfield and Mike Quinn to work the different types of muscle fibers for maximum stimulation. Three different exercises that work the same muscle group are selected, and used for a superset. The first exercise uses a heavy weight (~85% of 1 rep max) for around five reps, the second a medium weight (~70% of 1 rep max) for around twelve reps, and finally the third exercise is performed with a light weight (~50% of 1 rep max) for twenty to thirty reps, or even lighter (~40% of 1 rep max) for forty or more reps. (Going to failure is discouraged.) The entire superset is performed three times.[44]
Beyond failure
- Forced reps
- Forced reps occur after momentary muscular failure. An assistant provides just enough help to get the weight trainer past the sticking point of the exercise, and allow further repetitions to be completed. Weight trainers often do this when they are spotting their exercise partner. With some exercises forced reps can be done without a training partner. For example, with one-arm biceps curls the other arm can be used to assist the arm that is being trained.
- Cheat reps
- Cheating is a deliberate compromise of form to maximize reps. Cheating has the advantage that it can be done without a training partner, but compromises safety. A typical example of cheat reps occurs during bicep curls when, beginning with the load at the waist, the exerciser swings the barbell or dumbbell forward and up during the concentric phase utilizing momentum to assist his bicep muscles in moving the load to a shortened muscle position. Momentum assistance during the concentric phase allows him to move greater loads during the more difficult concentric phase. The objective can be to position greater loads of resistance to the biceps in preparation of performing the eccentric phase than the more difficult concentric phase would otherwise allow. Replacing a typical function of a training partner with a solo exerciser performing cheat reps facilitates forced reps or negative reps when training alone.
- Rest-pause (post-failure)
- After a normal set of 6-8 reps (to failure), the weight is re-racked and the trainer takes 10-15 deep breaths, and then performs one more repetition. This process can be repeated for two further repetitions. The twenty-rep squat is another, similar approach, in that it follows a 12-15 rep set of squats with individual rest-pause reps, up to a total of 20 reps.[45]
- Weight stripping
- Weight stripping is a technique used after failure with a normal resistance in certain exercises, particularly with easily adjustable machines, whereby the weight trainer or a partner gradually reduces the resistance after a full set is taken to failure. With each reduction in resistance, as many possible reps are completed and the resistance is then reduced again. This is continued until the resistance is approximately half the original resistance.
- Negative reps
- Negatives are performed with much heavier weights. Assistants lift the weight, and then the weight trainer attempts to resist its downward progress through an eccentric contraction. Alternatively, an individual can use an exercise machine for negatives by lifting the weight with both arms or legs, and then lowering it with only one. Or they can simply lower weights more slowly than they lift them: for example, by taking two seconds to lift each weight and four seconds to lower it.
- Partial reps
- Partial reps, as the name implies, involves movement through only part of the normal path of an exercise. Partial reps can be performed with heavier weights. Usually, only the easiest part of the repetition is attempted.
- Burns
- Burns involve mixing partial reps into a set of full range reps in order to increase intensity. The partials can be performed at any part of the exercise movement, depending on what works best for the particular exercise.[46] Also, the partials can either be added after the end of a set or in some alternating fashion with the full range reps.[47] For example, after performing a set of biceps curls to failure, an individual would cheat the bar back to the most contracted position, and then perform several partial reps.
Other techniques
- Progressive movement training
- Progressive movement training attempts to gradually increase the range of motion throughout a training cycle. The lifter will start with a much heavier weight than they could handle in the full range of motion, only moving through the last 3-5” of the movement. Throughout the training cycle, the lifter will gradually increase the range of motion until the joint moves through the full range of the exercise. This is a style that was made popular by Paul Anderson.[citation needed]
- Super slow
- Super slow repetitions are performed with lighter weights. The lifting and lowering phases of each repetition take 10 seconds or more.
- Timed rests
- By strictly controlling the rest periods between reps and sets a trainer can reduce their level of blood oxygenation, which helps to increase the stress on the muscles.
- Wrist straps
- Wrist straps (lifting straps) are sometimes used to assist in gripping very heavy weights. They are particularly useful for the deadlift. Some lifters avoid using wrist straps in order to develop their grip strength, just as some go further by using thick bars. Wrist straps can allow a lifter initially to use more weight than they might be able to handle safely for an entire set, as unlike simply holding a weight, if it is dropped then the lifter must descend with it or be pulled down. Straps place stress on the bones of the wrist which can be potentially harmful if excessive.
See also
- Body image
- Bodybuilding supplement
- Exercise physiology
- General fitness training
- Gym
- Health club
- Metabolic window
- Mixed martial arts
- Muscle dysmorphia
- Overtraining
- Personal Trainer
- Physical culture
- Physical exercise
- Physical fitness
- Sports medicine
- Super Slow
- Supercompensation
- Supination
- Weight training bench
- List of health and fitness magazines
Footnotes
- ^ Todd, Jan (1995). "From Milo to Milo: A History of Barbells, Dumbells, and Indian Clubs" (PDF). Iron Game History. 3 (No.6).
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:|issue=
has extra text (help) - ^ MSNBC article on the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report on the prevalence of strength training
- ^ Kitai, T.A. (2004). abstract "Specificity of joint angle in isometric training" (abstract). European Journal of Applied Physiology. 58: 744–8. doi:10.1007/BF00637386.
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: Check|url=
value (help); Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ a b Feigenbaum, M.S. (1997). "Strength Training. Rationale for Current Guidelines for Adult Fitness Programs". Physician and Sportsmedicine. ISSN 0091-3847.
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: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ Rhea MR, Phillips WT, Burkett LN; et al. (2003). "A comparison of linear and daily undulating periodized programs with equated volume and intensity for local muscular endurance". J Strength Cond Res. 17 (1): 82–7. doi:10.1519/1533-4287(2003)017<0082:ACOLAD>2.0.CO;2. PMID 12580661.
{{cite journal}}
: Explicit use of et al. in:|author=
(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Laskowski, ER (2006-07-28). "Strength training: How many sets for best results?". Mayo Clinic. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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/|date=
mismatch (help) - ^ a b Kraemer, W.J. (2003). "Strength training basics: Designing workouts to meet patients' goals". Physician and sportsmedicine. 31 (8): 39–45. doi:10.3810/psm.2003.08.457. PMID 20086485. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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: Unknown parameter|doi_brokendate=
ignored (|doi-broken-date=
suggested) (help) - ^ Rønnestad BR, Egeland W, Kvamme NH, Refsnes PE, Kadi F, Raastad T (2007). "Dissimilar effects of one- and three-set strength training on strength and muscle mass gains in upper and lower body in untrained subjects". J Strength Cond Res. 21 (1): 157–63. doi:10.1519/R-19895.1. PMID 17313291.
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suggested) (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Siff MC (2003). Supertraining. Supertraining Institute. ISBN 1-874856-65-6.
- ^ Brooks, G.A. (1996). Exercise Physiology: Human Bioenergetics and Its Applications. Mayfield Publishing Co. ISBN 0072556420.
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- ^ Kraemer, William J.; Zatsiorsky, Vladimir M. (2006). Science and Practice of Strength Training, Second Edition. Champaign, Ill: Human Kinetics Publishers. p. 161. ISBN 0-7360-5628-9.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Campos GE, Luecke TJ, Wendeln HK; et al. (2002). "Muscular adaptations in response to three different resistance-training regimens: specificity of repetition maximum training zones". Eur. J. Appl. Physiol. 88 (1–2): 50–60. doi:10.1007/s00421-002-0681-6. PMID 12436270.
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Rhea MR, Ball SD, Phillips WT, Burkett LN (2002). "A comparison of linear and daily undulating periodized programs with equated volume and intensity for strength". J Strength Cond Res. 16 (2): 250–5. doi:10.1519/1533-4287(2002)016<0250:ACOLAD>2.0.CO;2. PMID 11991778.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Buford TW, Rossi SJ, Smith DB, Warren AJ (2007). "A comparison of periodization models during nine weeks with equated volume and intensity for strength". J Strength Cond Res. 21 (4): 1245–50. doi:10.1519/R-20446.1. PMID 18076234.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ The Metabolism Myth
- ^ De Mello Meirelles, C. (2004). "Acute effects of resistance exercise on energy expenditure: revisiting the impact of the training variables" (pdf). Rev Bras Med Esporte. 10: 131–8. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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suggested) (help) - ^ Strength Training Beginners, Bodybuilders, and Athletes by Philip E. Allsen
- ^ Haykowsky MJ, Liang Y, Pechter D, Jones LW, McAlister FA, Clark AM (2007-06-19). "A meta-analysis of the effect of exercise training on left ventricular remodeling in heart failure patients: the benefit depends on the type of training performed". J Am Coll Cardiol. 49 (24): 2329–36. doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2007.02.055. PMID 17572248.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ How Exercise Helps Depression
- ^ Article on protein intake and bodybuilding
- ^ Kleiner, S.M. (1997). Nutrition for muscle builders. The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 25(8), n.p.
- ^ Article on high protein diet and kidney function
- ^ Manninen AH. (2005). "High-protein diets are not hazardous for the healthy kidneys". Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. 20 (3): 657. doi:10.1093/ndt/gfh645. PMID 15735253.
- ^ Regulation of muscle glycogen repletion, muscle protein synthesis and repair following exercise
- ^ Volek JS. (2004). Influence of nutrition on responses to resistance training. Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise.
- ^ Hydration 101: Don’t Tempt Fate, Hydrate!
- ^ Cribb PJ, Hayes A (2006). "Effects of supplement timing and resistance exercise on skeletal muscle hypertrophy". Med Sci Sports Exerc. 38 (11): 1918–25. doi:10.1249/01.mss.0000233790.08788.3e. PMID 17095924. Free preprint.
- ^ Nutrition and protein synthesis
- ^ Manninen AH. (2006). "Hyperinsulinaemia, hyperaminoacidaemia and post-exercise muscle anabolism: the search for the optimal recovery drink". British Journal of Sports Medicine. 40 (11): 900. doi:10.1136/bjsm.2006.030031. PMC 2465040. PMID 16950882.
- ^ Freedson, PS (2000-07-01). "Strength Training for Women". IDEA Personal Trainer. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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(help) - ^ Ebben, W.P. "Strength training for women: Debunking myths that block opportunity" ([dead link ] – Scholar search). The Physician and Sportsmedicine (May 1998). 2. Retrieved 2008-02-06.
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- ^ a b Dowshen, S (2005-05-01). "Strength Training and Your Child". kidshealth.org. Retrieved 2008-01-18.
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suggested) (help) - ^ a b Faigenbaum, AD. "Youth Resistance Training" (pdf). National Strength and Conditioning Association. Retrieved 2008-01-18.
- ^ "Position statement: Youth Resistance Training" (pdf). National Strength and Conditioning Association. Retrieved 2008-01-18.
- ^ Stamford, B (1997). "The right way to do sit-ups". The Physician and Sportsmedicine. 25 (6).
- ^ Andersen, R.E. (2003). "Physical activity and weight management: Building the case for exercise". The Physicial and Sportsmedicine. 31 (9).
{{cite journal}}
: Unknown parameter|coauthors=
ignored (|author=
suggested) (help) - ^ Kraemer, W.J. (2003). Strength training basics: Designing workouts to meet patients' goals. The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 31(8), n.p.
- ^ Knuttgen, H.G. (2003). What is exercise? A primer for practitioners. The Physician and Sportsmedicine, 31(3), n.p.
- ^ Griner, T. (2000). Muscle metabolism: Aerobic vs. Anaerobic. Dynamic Chiropractic, 18(7) retrieved October 16th, 2006
- ^ Kennedy, Robert and Ross, Don (1988). Muscleblasting! Brief and Brutal Shock Training. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., p. 17
- ^ Kennedy, Robert (1983). Beef It! Upping the Muscle Mass, Advanced Nutrition, Shock-training Strategies. Sterling Publishing Co.
- ^ Kennedy, Robert and Ross, Don (1988). Muscleblasting! Brief and Brutal Shock Training. Sterling Publishing Co., Inc., pp. 16-17
- ^ "Rest-pause method of body-building".
- ^ Pushing Past Muscle Failure With Burns
- ^ Kennedy, Robert and Weis, Dennis (1986), Mass!, New Scientific Bodybuilding Secrets, Contemporary Books
Bibliography
Many of the most useful books about weight training contain the word "bodybuilding" in the title, but they should not be overlooked just for this reason. Weight trainers who are not interested in bodybuilding can ignore the material devoted to contest preparation, and still obtain much valuable information.
- Delavier, Frederic (2001). Strength Training Anatomy. Human Kinetics Publishers. ISBN 0-7360-4185-0.
- DeLee, J. MD and Drez, D. MD, Eds. (2003). DeLee & Drez's Orthopaedic Sports Medicine; Principles and Practice (vols 1 & 2). ISBN 0-7216-8845-4.
- Hatfield, Frederick (1993). Hardcore Bodybuilding: A Scientific Approach. McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-8092-3728-8.
- Lombardi, V. Patteson (1989). Beginning Weight Training. Wm. C. Brown Publishers. ISBN 0-697-10696-9.
- Powers, Scott and Howley, Edward (2003), Exercise Physiology. McGraw Hill. ISBN 0-07-255728-1.
- Schoenfeld, Brad (2002). Sculpting Her Body Perfect. Human Kinetics Publishers. ISBN 0-7360-4469-8.
- Schwarzenegger, Arnold (1999). The New Encyclopedia of Modern Bodybuilding. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0-684-85721-9.