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Short-Term Training: When Do Repeated Bouts of...
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Short-Term Training: When Do Repeated Bouts of Resistance Exercise Become Training?

Abstract

Chronic resistance training induces increases in muscle fibre cross-sectional area (CSA), otherwise known as hypertrophy. This is due to an increased volume percentage of myofibrillarproteins within a given fibre. The exact time-course for muscle fibre hypertrophy is not well-documented but appears to require at least 6-7 weeks of regular resistive training at reasonably high intensity before increases in fibre CSA are deemed significant. Proposed training-induced changes in neural drive are hypothesized to increase strength due to increased synchrony of motor unit firing, reducedant agonist muscle activity, and/or a reduction in any bilateral strength deficit. Nonetheless, increases in muscle protein synthesis were observed following an isolated bout of resistance exercise. In addition, muscle balance was positive, following resistance exercise when amino acids were infused/ingested. This showed that protein accretion occurred during the postexercise period. The implications of this hypothesis for training-induced increases in strength are discussed.

Authors

Phillips SM

Volume

25

Pagination

pp. 185-193

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Publication Date

June 1, 2000

DOI

10.1139/h00-014

Conference proceedings

Applied Physiology Nutrition and Metabolism

Issue

3

ISSN

1715-5312
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