Guest guest Posted August 3, 2004 Report Share Posted August 3, 2004 Hi there all, As some other members on ST already stated, the results of the study was not surprising at all. And neither did the results give anyone a reason to question the effectiveness of pre-exhaustion if they didn't already. The HIT theory is not based on maximising EMG-readings anyway. It is based on high intensity and maximising exhaustion, where intensity isn't defined as high EMG. [Wayne, the authors stated that the rationale behind the study was a general opinion among people using pre-exhaustion that it increased EMG. It said so right in the article. -J Gray] Gray stated, > pre-exhaustion causes decreased motor unit activity (EMG) in the muscle that > you are training. However, this isn't a revolutionary concept; it's been > known for a long time - when muscle is fatigued, it causes a decrease in the > firing pattern of the motor units innervating those fibres, decreased muscle > activity and hence lower EMG. Wayne replies, True, but I was not questioning that part, [it appeared you were when, in your message dated 07/14/2204, you stated: " I said well of course there was as there was still muscle activity going on from the pre-exhaustion. " -J Gray] Gray said, > There is a possibility that some subjects may still be fatigued from their > 10 RM after a 20-minute rest. But this effect would have created *lower* > EMG in the leg press only condition because motor unit activity DECREASES > when the muscle fibres are fatigued, Wayne replies, But what if, in my opinion, there was still muscle activity going on in the legs, by activity I mean muscular pumping. Then the legs would start cooling down but then, what if after the pre-exhaustion, and then a 20min rest, the legs would have not been fatigued, but really warmed up, and the body would have been producing endofins, and the people would have been ready to put their all in the leg press after completion of the pre-exhaustion, thus a higher EMG reading in the second test. This coupled with my first of two more points [Wayne, I have several years of experience using EMG in a number of research investigations, and this sounds very unrealistic. -J Gray] Now two more points in the study, and why I think the study was flawed, it states in the study, when the leg press was used with pre-exhaustion less repetitions were done, and more repetitions were done when the leg press only was used, that is because when they did the pre-test to find out their 10RM, on that day and the day of the study, they did not take into account that when doing pre-exhaustion, on average you will need to reduce the weight on the second exercise of any pre-exhaustion (in this study the second exercise on the pre-exhaustion being the leg press) by a average of 30%, so if your 10RM was say 150 pounds on the leg press you would on pre-exhaustion, have to reduce by 30%, thus 150 pounds becomes 105 pounds, this clearly points out the people carrying out the study, did not fully understand pre-exhaustion, and should have taken the time to read or ask some experts on the subject. [The leg press weight is kept constant to ensure that the same WORK is done in each case. If you take your suggestion, then the leg press at a ligher weight means the subjects would perform less work, and then get less fatigue. It also makes it very difficult to compare between the exercises if you vary up their workloads, and then try to comment on things like EMG. - J Gray] Last point they really should have done the study the other way around to, say one week later, in the study they did, pre exhaustion (leg extension, leg press) then in twenty minutes leg press only, well one week later they should have done, leg press then in twenty minutes pre exhaustion (leg extension, leg press) just to see the difference in results. [As I mentioned in an earlier email, from the results of the study it is highly likely that this would not have changed their conclusions. -J Gray] Thank you Wayne ROWLEY Valletta Malta Gray wrote: > Hi Wayne, > > On the contrary, I have read the full study - I get the journal > delivered to my doorstep. I have a fair amount of research > experience and read dozens of research articles each week. I don't > agree with your conclusions about the study, and I don't believe you > have displayed enough of an understanding right now about EMG to > appropriately review their research. That was the only point I was > trying to make in my message. If Jesper Augustsson agreed with you, > was that in private? I don't understand why he would have, since > researchers usually put a fair amount of thought into their research > design. > > A book that you might find interesting to review is " Muscles Alive " > by Basmajian (1985). This is a fundamental text in EMG that > explains a lot of what the EMG signal is, and is not. There have > been a lot of further developments in EMG since then, but at least > this gives a good foundation on the topic. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2004 Report Share Posted September 11, 2004 Wayne, With all due respect, this is the stupidest thing that I have read for a long time. Surely muscles will contribute different amount throughout a rep and as Dr Siff said, fibre recruitment can vary rep to rep. Any justification for the tempo? As far as accounting percentages based on your experiment, are you serious? If you get your friends together again, try pre-exhausting other muscles first. Try pecs, anterior delts and rotator cuff, forearms then try to explain why the reduction adds up to more than 100%. Then chuck in a high intensity stair master session and tell me which muscles were pre-exhausted because your bench less after flogging yourself with 10 minutes of interval cardio. Better yet, inject muscle relaxants into your arms, and when you can't lift anything, tell us that pulldowns use the arms 100%. Driscoll Sydney, Australia. > > Hi all, > > I said last time, I am doing some simple tests, to prove my point on pre-exhaustion and the weak link, ( I did these tests years ago, but all that data is in my other home) which every one can do, and it proves my point on pre-exhaustion and the weak link, if I remember correctly on overhead press for example your triceps are doing say 40% of the work, thus you will fail from the overhead press with the triceps failing first thus your shoulders are getting a 60% workout (100% being 100% failure for the shoulders for the shoulder press) thus your shoulders are getting a mild to good workout, and you are stopping short of a hard workout for the shoulders, because of the weak link the triceps, by say 40%. > > Hope you all understand the above, it is the only way I could think of explaining and putting numbers and percentages into pre- exhaustion. > > Will post my results and the test later. > > Here are the results of my tests. > > I would like to say pre-exhaustion is more for the bodybuilder and hypertrophy, and I am not at all against compound movements, pre- exhaustion should be implied in any training program wisely and infrequently, as to much per-exhaustion will deplete your recovery ability, thus lead to overtraining. > > I did some tests with 10 volunteers trained and untrained, including one of them myself, on finding out how much the biceps contributes to the lat pulldowns and how much the triceps contribute to the shoulder press, to prove the biceps and triceps are weak links on these exercises, maybe some of the group can do similar test and post the results ? > > I would say the biceps are used (mind you the forearms and other muscles contribute to the pulldowns) from 20 to 35% in the pulldowns, all depends on the individual, and the triceps are used in the shoulder press from 25 to 45%. (please see below) > > First you will have to see what you can pulldown IN GOOD FORM, 2 sec. pos. 4 sec. neg. for a one rep max. NO JERKING, then a couple of days later, do the opposite of what pre-exhaustion is all about, and pre-exhaust the biceps to complete failure, I would suggest two exercises; > > 1. Twisting (supinating) db. Curls 2 sec. pos. 4 sec neg. 1 x 12 reps. to complete failure, then immediately > 2. Barbell curls 2 sec. pos. 4 sec neg. 1 x 12 reps. to complete failure, then immediately (AND I MEAN IMMEDIATELY BECAUSE IF ITS NOT DONE IMMEDIATELY, most people can get about 30 to 40% of their strength back after 3 sec.) > > You then do the lat pulldowns ( remember no jerking two sec. positive 4 sec. negative) I would suggest lightening the weight by 25%, you might have to do this test a few times to get it right, (now you know why I took so long posting back) when you do the pulldowns after pre-exhausting the biceps to failure, you will find that you will do less weight in the pulldowns, using a far lighter weight, will proves the biceps are a weak link. > > If you do pulldowns for your lats you are only getting a 65 to 80% of a workout for them 100% being a total workout to failure. > > For bodybuilding and hypertrophy, I think it best to isolate each muscle group, say 70% of the time, and in this day and age most gyms have a pullover machine so why not use it and cut out the weak link, > > Same goes for the triceps being the weak link on the shoulder press, pre-exhaust it first with two prime action triceps exercises then try the shoulder press, or similar compound movement. > > You are very clever and I can see where you were getting by doing the pulldowns correctly, you will use more of the lats, but this simple test proves there is a weak link. > > said, > > I have trained long enough at these two movements that I know what Arthur and you are talking about, but you are both operating under what is called a " mistaken certainty " . You are " certain " about something, but are " mistaken " . > > Wayne replied, > > Do my test and you will see that we are not at a mistaken, but you are. > > Wayne Rowley > Valletta Malta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 15, 2004 Report Share Posted September 15, 2004 Oof! My jaw simply dropped in astonishment after reading such rubbish. It is the policy of Supertraining to refrain from name calling and such, but the pompsity and condescending vibe of this " Test " (don't anyone dare call it a study! you all know better) make it extremely difficult to comply. So out of respect for the late Dr. Siff (who I'm sure would've also found it hard to reply politely) let's see what we can learn out of this non-sense: >>> if I remember correctly on overhead press for example your tricepsare doing say 40% of the work, thus you will fail from the overhead press with the triceps failing first thus your shoulders are getting a 60% workout (100% being 100% failure for the shoulders for the shoulder press) thus your shoulders are getting a mild to good workout, and you are stopping short of a hard workout for the shoulders, because of the weak link the triceps, by say 40%. Tremendously curious to find out how it was determined that the triceps do %40 of the work. In order for us to replicate the " experiment " we need to know what methods/equations were used to determine the percentage. There is this thing in good research called reliability, that is, if the conditions are kept similar, no matter who reproduces the experiment, the results will also be similar, or very close. This is how one determines whether obtained results were highly probably because of the methods applied, or a fluke. Thus, before we proceed to try your " experiment " please do enlighten us and provide us with the methods/equations that resulted in the 40% distribution for the triceps. I hope you did not pick your 40%, say, at ramdom, because that would inmediately nullify your entire " work " . > > >>> Will post my results and the test later. Looking forward to them... > > >>> I did some tests with 10 volunteers trained and untrained, including one of them myself, on finding out how much the biceps contributes to the lat pulldowns and how much the triceps contribute to the shoulder press, to prove the biceps and triceps are weak links on these exercises, maybe some of the group can do similar test and post the results ? First, before we can conduct similar " tests " you need to provide us with the methods/equations used to determine the percentage distribution of the work performed by the different arm muscle groups. Second, for a experiment/study to have validity, the participants cannot know what is expected of them. They just have to follow instructions. Otherwise, the results have a high likelyhood of being subjective. Ever heard of the placebo effect? Your participating in the " experiement " weakens your results with bias even more. > >>> I would say the biceps are used (mind you the forearms and other muscles contribute to the pulldowns) from 20 to 35% in the pulldowns, all depends on the individual, and the triceps are used in the shoulder press from 25 to 45%. (please see below) Please see above, need to provides us with those methods/equations first... >>> First you will have to see what you can pulldown IN GOOD FORM, 2 sec. pos. 4 sec. neg. for a one rep max. NO JERKING, then a couple of days later, do the opposite of what pre-exhaustion is all about, and pre-exhaust the biceps to complete failure.... 2 Sec. positive, 4 second negative. We are all still trying to figure out how the complex processes that lead to muscle contraction, with all the neurological and biochemical processes involved were given such precise speeds. Don't start with " Arthur said... " because AJ himself did not give a satisfactory explanation and rather resorted to calling people " idiots " for questioning him. I'm sure that you have plenty of supporting material to make reference to those speeds, otherwise, you would add another strike to your " experiment " > > >>>..You then do the lat pulldowns ( remember no jerking two sec. positive 4 sec. negative) I would suggest lightening the weight by 25%, you might have to do this test a few times to get it right, (now you know why I took so long posting back) when you do the pulldowns after pre-exhausting the biceps to failure, you will find that you will do less weight in the pulldowns, using a far lighter weight, will proves the biceps are a weak link. Actually, this falls more in the common sense category, also known as " Duh " . I have yet to see anyone determined to work their backs hard, frying their arms first. Of course the arms help with the pull, and so do a lot more other muscle groups that cross the glenohumeral joint and shoulder girdle. Muscle isolation (under natural circumstances of course) is physiologically impossible, and those who keep advocating it rabidly, do so under blind faith to a training system rather than solid knowledge. > >>> If you do pulldowns for your lats you are only getting a 65 to 80% of a workout for them 100% being a total workout to failure. I don't know about anyone else, but this sense does not make any sense... > >>> For bodybuilding and hypertrophy, I think it best to isolate each muscle group, say 70% of the time, and in this day and age most gyms have a pullover machine so why not use it and cut out the weak link, Why 70? Once again, where do these numbers come from? > >>> Same goes for the triceps being the weak link on the shoulder press, pre-exhaust it first with two prime action triceps exercises then try the shoulder press, or similar compound movement. Ok, let's see, the triceps are the weak link on the shoulder press, so I have to pre-exhaust them first... wouldn't that make them weaker? Wouldn't that hinder the so called " weak link " even more? If you want to " target " the shoulders to max exhaustion without much interference from the triceps, wouldn't it make sense to " pre- exhaust " them with " isolation movements " (such as lateral raises) and then when the shoulders are tired, do your presses so that your triceps assist you as opposed to hinder you? I think you just shot yourself in the foot. > > >>> Wayne replied, >>> >>> Do my test and you will see that we are not at a mistaken, but you are. Oh are we? For a while now,you have trolling the forum with all this nonsense, failing to back-up your claims with credible material. You also have a deity-like attitude whose mission is to enlighten those poor exercise physiologists trapped in the darkness of strength and conditioning, with the " wisdom " of bodybuilding. After all, were you not the one who stated that athletes should train like bodybuilders? Believing that you are right does not make it so. Had you handed that " experiment " of yours in an academic setting, you would've been give a big time " F " and sent back to remdial classes. Then again, we all merit the chance of doubt. Perhaps when you explain your methods and techniques and enlighten us as to how you obtained your magical numbers (as any valid study does) then we may further that painful-to-read posting of yours into some more constructive. Until then, your " experiment " proves nothing. Israel A. Clifton, NJ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 16, 2004 Report Share Posted September 16, 2004 , Although I agree with you in the matter of Wayne's " study " being absurd, I feel your response was quite unprofessional as a moderator of this site. Specifically because I have had messages filtered and not posted that were more tasteful than your response to Wayne. I have responded to some of the " supposedly educated " individuals on this site using physics and engineering as " proof " of mechanical properties of function and had the message rejected because I didn't quote clinical trials or a study and supposedly used bad a " tone " in my wording. I feel if my messages are going to get filtered for those types of things, it should be standard across the board. Just a thought. p.s. I actually really enjoyed reading your message, it was hysterical. And Wayne's message was absolutely ridiculous, but I would appreciate being able to post a similar message without fear of getting the message rejected. Thanks so much. Joe DeAntonis Pittsburgh, PA > > > > Hi all, > > > > I said last time, I am doing some simple tests, to prove my point > on pre-exhaustion and the weak link, ( I did these tests years ago, > but all that data is in my other home) which every one can do, and > it proves my point on pre-exhaustion and the weak link, if I > remember correctly on overhead press for example your triceps are > doing say 40% of the work, thus you will fail from the overhead > press with the triceps failing first thus your shoulders are getting > a 60% workout (100% being 100% failure for the shoulders for the > shoulder press) thus your shoulders are getting a mild to good > workout, and you are stopping short of a hard workout for the > shoulders, because of the weak link the triceps, by say 40%. > > > > Hope you all understand the above, it is the only way I could > think of explaining and putting numbers and percentages into pre- > exhaustion. > > > > Will post my results and the test later. > > > > Here are the results of my tests. > > > > I would like to say pre-exhaustion is more for the bodybuilder and > hypertrophy, and I am not at all against compound movements, pre- > exhaustion should be implied in any training program wisely and > infrequently, as to much per-exhaustion will deplete your recovery > ability, thus lead to overtraining. > > > > I did some tests with 10 volunteers trained and untrained, > including one of them myself, on finding out how much the biceps > contributes to the lat pulldowns and how much the triceps contribute > to the shoulder press, to prove the biceps and triceps are weak > links on these exercises, maybe some of the group can do similar > test and post the results ? > > > > I would say the biceps are used (mind you the forearms and other > muscles contribute to the pulldowns) from 20 to 35% in the > pulldowns, all depends on the individual, and the triceps are used > in the shoulder press from 25 to 45%. (please see below) > > > > First you will have to see what you can pulldown IN GOOD FORM, 2 > sec. pos. 4 sec. neg. for a one rep max. NO JERKING, then a couple > of days later, do the opposite of what pre-exhaustion is all about, > and pre-exhaust the biceps to complete failure, I would suggest two > exercises; > > > > 1. Twisting (supinating) db. Curls 2 sec. pos. 4 sec neg. 1 x 12 > reps. to complete failure, then immediately > > 2. Barbell curls 2 sec. pos. 4 sec neg. 1 x 12 reps. to complete > failure, then immediately (AND I MEAN IMMEDIATELY BECAUSE IF ITS NOT > DONE IMMEDIATELY, most people can get about 30 to 40% of their > strength back after 3 sec.) > > > > You then do the lat pulldowns ( remember no jerking two sec. > positive 4 sec. negative) I would suggest lightening the weight by > 25%, you might have to do this test a few times to get it right, > (now you know why I took so long posting back) when you do the > pulldowns after pre-exhausting the biceps to failure, you will find > that you will do less weight in the pulldowns, using a far lighter > weight, will proves the biceps are a weak link. > > > > If you do pulldowns for your lats you are only getting a 65 to 80% > of a workout for them 100% being a total workout to failure. > > > > For bodybuilding and hypertrophy, I think it best to isolate each > muscle group, say 70% of the time, and in this day and age most gyms > have a pullover machine so why not use it and cut out the weak link, > > > > Same goes for the triceps being the weak link on the shoulder > press, pre-exhaust it first with two prime action triceps exercises > then try the shoulder press, or similar compound movement. > > > > You are very clever and I can see where you were getting by > doing the pulldowns correctly, you will use more of the lats, but > this simple test proves there is a weak link. > > > > said, > > > > I have trained long enough at these two movements that I know what > Arthur and you are talking about, but you are both operating under > what is called a " mistaken certainty " . You are " certain " about > something, but are " mistaken " . > > > > Wayne replied, > > > > Do my test and you will see that we are not at a mistaken, but you > are. > > > > Wayne Rowley > > Valletta Malta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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