Muscle growth

ketsugo

Active member
Mar 28, 2016
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Ezine #120
Brand new study: Muscle-growth myth shattered

We harp on the Size Principle of Muscle Fiber Recruitment a lot. Why? Because understanding it is important to get the most muscle growth possible--in both the fast-twitch as well as slow-twitch fibers…

The Size Principle basically says that in any set, the earlier reps fire a majority of slow-twitch fibers. And as the reps get harder, more and more fast-twitch fibers are brought into play. At failure, the majority of fibers firing are fast-twitch.

With that in mind, a new study looked at lighter, high-rep vs. standard lower-rep training in experienced lifters (not beginners)--and the results basically shattered the myth that you need heavy weights to get optimal growth in the fast-twitch fibers…

In fact, 3 sets of high-rep (30) sets produced fast-twitch growth almost exactly equal to a heavy set (80 percent of 1-rep-max). The bonus with the high-rep sets is that they produced almost DOUBLE the growth in the slow-twitch fibers [J Appl Physiology 2016: In press]…

Recall that we've been discussing recent findings that slow-twitch fibers appear to have much more size potential than previously believed. So using some higher-rep sets stimulate more growth in the slow-twitch. That means...

It may be that higher-rep training is the get-bigger trigger you've been looking for if you're after extreme muscle growth because you get hypertrophy in the slow- AND fast-twitch fibers…

If you use high reps exclusively--because you're older and/or injured--the key is going to failure on your high-rep sets--so that you get as many fast-twitch fibers to fire at the end of each set. That way you get plenty of stimulation for BOTH slow-twitch (early in the set) and fast-twitch (toward the end of the set).

All of that may explain why we got a burst of new muscle-size when we added TORQ (tension-overload repetition quantity) to our workouts. Like the study, that is three or four high-rep sets to failure (for example: 30, 20, 15--there's more on TORQ and Super-TORQ in The Power-Density Mass Workout 2.0).

If you still use heavy work, try a TORQ sequence at the end of your body part routines. For example, in the Phase 1 workouts in Super-Size Crash Course, Jordon Williamson did four sets of one or two exercises, then ended with a 3-set TORQ sequence of an isolation move. It was a key to him packing on 18 pounds of drug-free muscle in 12 weeks…

We would guess that his gains were so fast because he was getting optimal growth in BOTH the slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers--as opposed to training ONLY in the 8-ish rep range the way most bodybuilders train


Till next time, train hard--and smart--for BIG results.

--Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson
X-Rep.com
Copyright 2016 Homebody Productions


I'm big fan if these dudes
 
I am doing high reps work outs. After years of doing the pyramid work out.
I can't believe how well it has been working. I have added size and strength.
 
Ezine #120
Brand new study: Muscle-growth myth shattered

We harp on the Size Principle of Muscle Fiber Recruitment a lot. Why? Because understanding it is important to get the most muscle growth possible--in both the fast-twitch as well as slow-twitch fibers…

The Size Principle basically says that in any set, the earlier reps fire a majority of slow-twitch fibers. And as the reps get harder, more and more fast-twitch fibers are brought into play. At failure, the majority of fibers firing are fast-twitch.

With that in mind, a new study looked at lighter, high-rep vs. standard lower-rep training in experienced lifters (not beginners)--and the results basically shattered the myth that you need heavy weights to get optimal growth in the fast-twitch fibers…

In fact, 3 sets of high-rep (30) sets produced fast-twitch growth almost exactly equal to a heavy set (80 percent of 1-rep-max). The bonus with the high-rep sets is that they produced almost DOUBLE the growth in the slow-twitch fibers [J Appl Physiology 2016: In press]…

Recall that we've been discussing recent findings that slow-twitch fibers appear to have much more size potential than previously believed. So using some higher-rep sets stimulate more growth in the slow-twitch. That means...

It may be that higher-rep training is the get-bigger trigger you've been looking for if you're after extreme muscle growth because you get hypertrophy in the slow- AND fast-twitch fibers…

If you use high reps exclusively--because you're older and/or injured--the key is going to failure on your high-rep sets--so that you get as many fast-twitch fibers to fire at the end of each set. That way you get plenty of stimulation for BOTH slow-twitch (early in the set) and fast-twitch (toward the end of the set).

All of that may explain why we got a burst of new muscle-size when we added TORQ (tension-overload repetition quantity) to our workouts. Like the study, that is three or four high-rep sets to failure (for example: 30, 20, 15--there's more on TORQ and Super-TORQ in The Power-Density Mass Workout 2.0).

If you still use heavy work, try a TORQ sequence at the end of your body part routines. For example, in the Phase 1 workouts in Super-Size Crash Course, Jordon Williamson did four sets of one or two exercises, then ended with a 3-set TORQ sequence of an isolation move. It was a key to him packing on 18 pounds of drug-free muscle in 12 weeks…

We would guess that his gains were so fast because he was getting optimal growth in BOTH the slow-twitch and fast-twitch fibers--as opposed to training ONLY in the 8-ish rep range the way most bodybuilders train


Till next time, train hard--and smart--for BIG results.

--Steve Holman and Jonathan Lawson
X-Rep.com
Copyright 2016 Homebody Productions


I'm big fan if these dudes
Similar to what serge nubret used to talk about. Good read. I've been doing more and more high reps with controlled weight lately, as well.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk
 
Yep, my heavy days are over. I'm too old for that shit lol.
Been doing a lot of lighter weight and really focusing on the movement.
 
Yep, my heavy days are over. I'm too old for that shit lol.
Been doing a lot of lighter weight and really focusing on the movement.

Same here, considering my knee and back issues after getting seriously hurt in a bad fall 15 yrs ago. My own heavy days are long gone as well. Higher reps with lower weight along with careful form works well now for me.
 
Similar to what serge nubret used to talk about. Good read. I've been doing more and more high reps with controlled weight lately, as well.

Sent from my SM-G900V using Tapatalk

Yup I caught that too, also Arthur Jones all these people that some thought crazy or extreme end up being spot on later .
 
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