Guest guest Posted January 5, 2006 Report Share Posted January 5, 2006 I have recently been discussing loaded stretching with one of the NSCA members and they made the following comment: " Holding a muscle in an elongated position may also provoke some hypertrophy of the muscle fibers (see Goldspink). " Can any of the members add any additional information or provide the complete reference? The following may add to the discussion: Muscle Fiber Hypertrophy vs. Hyperplasia:Has the debate been settled? By: PhD http://www.afpafitness.com/articles/FiberType.htm <<<...More recently, I performed a study using the same stretch model. In addition, I used a progressive overload scheme whereby the bird was initally loaded with a weight equal to 10% of the its weight followed by increments of 15%, 20%, 25%, and 35% of its weight (5). Each weight increment was interspersed with a 2 day rest. The total number of stretch days was 28. Using this approach produced the greatest gains in muscle mass EVER recorded in an animal or human model of tension-induced overload, up to a 334% increase in muscle mass with up to a 90% increase in fiber number (5,8)! That is pretty impressive training responsiveness for our feathered descendants of dinosaurs. But you might ask yourself, what does hanging a weight on a bird have to do with humans who lift weights? So who cares if birds can increase muscle mass by over 300% and fiber number by 90%. Well, you've got a good point. Certainly, nobody out there (that I know of), hangs weights on their arms for 30 days straight or even 30 minutes for that matter. Maybe you should try it and see what happens. This could be a different albeit painful way to " train. " But actually the physiologically interesting point is that if presented with an appropriate stimulus, a muscle can produce more fibers! What is an appropriate stimulus? I think it is one that involves subjecting muscle fibers to high tension overload (enough to induce injury) followed by a regenerative period....>>> Looking forward to comments Carruthers Wakefield, UK Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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