Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Definitive (and Practical) Guide to Muscle Hypertrophy
Episode Date: January 16, 2019Muscle hypertrophy is a confusing subject. Hell, it’s a confusing word. How do you even say it? (Hi-PUR-trophy). And what does it mean, exactly? (It’s the technical term for muscle growth.) Some p...eople say that the best way to stimulate muscle hypertrophy is to use different rep ranges to develop different kinds of muscle fibers. Some say that there are different kinds of muscle hypertrophy—"myofibrillar" and "sarcoplasmic"—and if you aren't emphasizing both in your training then you're leaving gains on the table. If you want bigger muscles, you're told, you want to maximize sarcoplasmic hypertrophy, and you do that by training with light weights and high reps, supersets, and so forth. And if you want stronger muscles, you want to maximize myofibrillar hypertrophy, and you do that by training with heavy weights and low reps. Then, others say that muscle hypertrophy is almost entirely genetic. They say your DNA determines whether you can build a lot of muscle or not, and how you train isn't going to make much of a difference one way or another. Then, of course, almost everyone says that cardio is horrible for muscle hypertrophy. When I started working out, I was your average tall, skinny dude, and for the first one and a half years, I followed run-of-the-mill bodybuilding magazine workouts. It kinda worked. By the end of this period I was, uh, a little less skinny? Fast forward about five and a half years, and while I had gained a fair amount of muscle along the way, it wasn’t exactly what I would have expected for seven years of dedicated weightlifting. So I decided to educate myself on the real science of muscle and strength gain and implement what I had learned. And in this podcast, I’m going to share with you the key lessons I’ve learned so you can follow in my footsteps. Let's get to it. 6:14 - What is muscle hypertrophy? 7:31 - What are the two kinds of muscle hypertrophy? 16:50 - Can you grow new muscle cells? 21:30 - How do you increase muscle growth? 23:03 - What are the muscle fiber types and how do they affect muscle hypertrophy? 29:44- How does strength training affect muscle hypertrophy? 34:39 - How does your diet affect your ability to gain muscle? 38:46 - How do genetics affect muscle hypertrophy? 42:02 - How does cardio affect muscle hypertrophy? 46:54 - What is the best way to stimulate muscle hypertrophy? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So long as you are using relatively heavy weights and you are training in the rep range of
somewhere between 4 and 12 reps and you are regularly pushing yourself in your sets to
about 1 to 2 reps shy of technical failure, you are going to experience
plenty of type 1 and type 2 muscle fiber growth.
type 2 muscle fiber growth. Hey, Mike Matthews here from Muscle for Life and Legion Athletics.
And in this episode of the podcast, we're going to talk about muscle hypertrophy, which can be a rather confusing subject. I mean, it's a confusing word. Many people don't even know how to say it.
subject. I mean, it's a confusing word. Many people don't even know how to say it.
Hypertrophy is the right way to say it. And what does that word mean? Well, it is simply the technical term for muscle growth. And some people say that the best way to stimulate muscle
hypertrophy is to use different rep ranges to develop different kinds of muscle fibers. Some
people say that there are different types of muscle hypert. Some people say that there are different
types of muscle hypertrophy. They say that there is myofibular hypertrophy and sarcoplasmic
hypertrophy. And if you aren't emphasizing both in your training, they say, then you are leaving
gains on the table. And if you want bigger muscles in particular, the story goes, then you want to maximize sarcoplasmic hypertrophy.
And you do that by training with light weights and high reps, supersets, dropsets, and so forth.
If you want stronger muscles, however, many people say that you want to maximize the myofibular hypertrophy.
And you do that by training with heavyweights and low reps. And then there are
other people still who say that muscle hypertrophy is almost entirely genetic. They say that your DNA
determines whether you can build a lot of muscle or not, and how quickly you're going to build that
muscle, and that how you train really isn't going to make that much of a difference one way or another, so long as you follow a few loose principles.
And then there is cardio, which most people say you should do as little of as possible or none of if you want to maximize muscle hypertrophy.
to maximize muscle hypertrophy. So if you have been trying to educate yourself on the topic and feel like you are just spinning in circles, I do understand. I was in your shoes at one point
as well. When I first started working out, I was just your average tall skinny dude. And for the
first year, year and a half or so, I followed just cookie cutter, run of the mill
bodybuilding magazine workouts. And it worked kind of by the end of my second year or so, I was
a little bit less skinny. My chest in particular responded well to resistance training. So had a
little bit of a chest and maybe a little bit of biceps, which also responded well, but otherwise hadn't really progressed all that much.
And then fast forward about five and a half years, and I had gained a fair amount of muscle along the
way, but it wasn't exactly what you would have expected for seven, seven and a half years of
dedicated weightlifting. In that period, I put on maybe
30 pounds of muscle. I'd gained maybe 30 pounds of muscle, no more than 35, which is a lot for sure,
but not for seven to eight years of training. You should be able to do that. Most guys should be
able to do that in their first three years. And for women, you could double that. That's a lot of muscle for women to gain.
It's a fair amount for men, a lot for women. And anyone who is familiar with my story knows that
it's around that time that I really started to educate myself on the science of gaining muscle
and strength and made significant progress going forward. So in this podcast, I'm going to share with you the
key lessons that I have learned along the way so you can avoid the mistakes that I was making in
the past and get to your goals faster. This is where I would normally plug a sponsor to pay the
bills, but I'm not big on promoting stuff that I don't personally use and believe in. So instead, I'm just going to
quickly tell you about something of mine, specifically by Flexible Dieting Cookbook,
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Let's get to the show.
All right, so let's start with answering a simple question.
The first question that we need to ask, which is what is muscle hypertrophy?
Well, like I mentioned, it is simply the technical term for an increase in muscle size.
Hyper means over or more.
So muscle hypertrophy literally means the growth of muscle cells.
Now to understand what causes muscle hypertrophy and how it works, you first need to understand
what muscles are comprised of.
are comprised of. So muscle tissue is a complex structure with bundles of long strands of muscle cells that are sheathed in a thick band of connective tissue known as the paramecium.
There are three main components of muscle tissue and they are water, which makes up about 60 to 80% of muscle tissue by weight,
glycogen, which is a form of stored carbohydrate that can make up anywhere from 0 to 5% of muscle
tissue by weight, and protein, which makes up about 20% of muscle tissue by weight.
So to cause muscle hypertrophy, you need to increase the amount of water, glycogen,
or protein in a muscle cell. Okay, so far so good. Simple enough, right? Now let's talk about the two
kinds of muscle hypertrophy. So when people say muscle hypertrophy, they're generally referring
to an increase in the amount of protein in the muscle. And this is known as myofibular hypertrophy,
which refers to an increase in the amount of protein contained in individual muscle cells.
Now it's called myofibular hypertrophy because myo means muscle and a fibril is a thread-like
cellular structure. Myofibular hypertrophy is not the only type of muscle
hypertrophy though. There is also sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. Now, sarco means flesh and plasmic
refers to plasma, which is a gel-like material in a cell that contains various important particles
for life. We can just leave it at that. We don't have to get too complicated with it.
important particles for life. We can just leave it at that. We don't have to get too complicated with it. So sarcoplasmic hypertrophy then is an increase in the volume of the fluid and the
non-contractile components of the muscle, the stuff that doesn't contract like glycogen,
water, minerals, and so forth. And just to help you picture this in your mind,
think of a muscle cell as this long cylindrical structure. We slice it
open. So now we're looking at a cross section of it. And what you'll see is that there are
smaller cylindrical structures called myofibrils in this muscle cell. And those are the contractile
elements of the muscle cell. Those are the active elements that make the muscles move.
Now they're surrounded by the sarcoplasm and the sarcoplasm plus the actual myofibrils
determine the size of the muscle cell in terms of diameter, right?
Because again, this is a round cylindrical structure.
So just for the sake of keeping this example simple, let's say that this muscle cell has six myofibrils in it that are surrounded by
sarcoplasm. If myofibrils are added to the muscle cell, that is myofibular hypertrophy. So let's say
through training over time, that muscle cell now contains 12 myofibrils. Now, what happens to the sarcoplasm? Well, it expands too,
but it doesn't necessarily expand in ratio to the myofibrils, meaning that while there will be
more sarcoplasm in an absolute sense when myofibrillar hypertrophy occurs, there may not be
more, relatively speaking. There may not be more when you look at the amount of
space that the myofibrils take up compared to the amount of space that the sarcoplasm takes up.
So that's myofibular hypertrophy, pretty simple, pretty well taped scientifically speaking.
Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy though is a bit more controversial because while we know that you
can temporarily increase the sarcoplasmic volume of a
muscle cell by doing things like getting a pump or loading creatine or eating a bunch of carbs,
there is an ongoing debate as to whether the sarcoplasm of a muscle cell can expand at a rate significantly faster than the myofibrils expand? And if it can, can this expansion result
in long-term increases in muscle size? In other words, can you cause long-term increases in muscle
size by focusing on increasing the sarcoplasmic volume of your muscle cells as opposed to the myofibular elements? Some people
say the answer is very obviously yes. They'll say, if that weren't the case, how do you explain
a 170-pound powerlifter out squatting a 250-pound bodybuilder? Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy would seem
to answer that question. The bodybuilder in his quest to build the biggest
muscles possible has apparently developed muscles with more sarcoplasm, but less contractile protein
than the powerlifter. In other words, bigger, but less functional muscles is kind of the idea.
I think there's a more likely explanation for this though. Strength athletes
squat, deadlift, and bench press far more frequently than bodybuilders. And the more you
do something, anything, the better you get at it. Therefore, powerlifters are probably just
better at those key exercises than bodybuilders who perform them much less frequently. And this is why you can find many
examples of bodybuilders that switch to powerlifting and gain strength very quickly as they
improve their technique and just their level of comfort with the exercise and their willingness
to push themselves in terms of set intensity, push themselves closer and closer to technical
failure. That said, it does appear that sarcoplasmic hypertrophy is indeed more than
merely a side effect of working out. And the reason for this revolves around something known
as cellular swelling. So every time a muscle contracts,
metabolic byproducts like lactic acid build up in and around the muscle cells. Your body then
pumps more blood into your muscles to carry these compounds away, which is what makes your muscle
cells swell. Now, these compounds also pull water into the muscle cells, making them
swell even larger. And this reduces the amount of blood that can escape, which causes even more
swelling. Now, we experience this cellular swelling, of course, as a pump. And there is
strong evidence that this alone increases protein synthesis, which is the creation of new muscle proteins
and the process that drives myofibular hypertrophy. So in other words, while
sarcoplasmic hypertrophy in and of itself doesn't contribute to overall muscle size as directly as
myofibular hypertrophy, at least not over the long term, it does seem to stimulate
more myofibular hypertrophy, thereby helping you get jacked faster. And this is one of the reasons
why it is a good idea for intermediate and advanced weightlifters in particular to include
some higher rep work in their workout routines, which maximizes sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. In my opinion,
beginners don't need to worry about periodizing their training like this. That's the technical
term for separating your training into phases where you increase or decrease volume or intensity.
So volume, you can think of as the number of hard sets that you're doing.
Simple way of looking at it. Intensity is the load that you are lifting in each set as a percentage of one rep max. And the reason why I say this about beginners is if they just spend
their first couple of years focusing on increasing their whole body strength with a lot of heavy
compound weightlifting, working mostly in one
rep range, let's say four to six, five to eight, six to eight, something like that. And using a
simple progression model like double progression, which is what my programs for men and women,
bigger, leaner, stronger, and thinner, leaner, stronger are based on. They are going to gain
more or less all of the muscle that they possibly can in that period. Meaning they're going to gain more or less all of the muscle that they possibly can in that period.
Meaning they're going to do just as well as if they followed the fanciest, most in-depth,
most intricate training program they could possibly find.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help
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your account. Okay. So what about growing new muscle cells? So far we've talked about expanding
the size of existing muscle cells through the addition of myofibrils or sarcoplasm, but what about creating new muscle cells all
together? Now, this is another controversial question because you may have heard of muscle
hyperplasia. That's an idea that's been kicking around in the bodybuilding space for many years
now, and it's a technical term that means the formation of new muscle cells. Plasia means the
development of cells. And the debate is whether
it's actually possible or not. So the people who believe that it is possible say that both
muscle hypertrophy and hyperplasia contribute to overall muscle growth and muscle size, whereas
the people who believe it is not possible say that it doesn't occur at all in humans, at least
under normal conditions, and any increase
in muscle size is solely due to the two types of muscle hypertrophy that we just discussed.
Who's right? Well, if you flip open a physiology textbook, you will read that there is nothing we
can do to increase or decrease the number of muscle cells in our bodies.
In other words, all we can do is grow or shrink the size of the muscle cells that we have.
And by and large, most studies do show that that is indeed the case. That said, most of those studies were conducted with sedentary people,
studies were conducted with sedentary people and there is some evidence that we may be able to add new muscle cells with enough years of hard training. Now, the first line of evidence for
this comes from animal research, which found that hyperplasia can occur if you use a sufficiently
brutal training protocol. For example, scientists from the University of Texas
found that they could cause a 24% increase in muscle size due to hyperplasia when they attached
a weight to a bird's wing for 30 days. Now, although it's not practical, other research
has shown that you can cause hyperplasia in rats by cutting them open and partially
destroying muscles. The things those crazy rats will do for gains. The second line of evidence
is a bit more convincing. So there are a few studies that have shown that bodybuilders
have more total muscle cells than their non-lifting counterparts, which has led some to conclude that their many years of
hard training must have caused at least some degree of muscle hyperplasia. There are a few
problems with those studies, though. One, we have no idea how many muscle cells everyone had before
they got into the bodybuilding, so it's possible that the bodybuilders in those studies
were just born with more muscle cells than sedentary people and therefore just had better
genetics for bodybuilding. Two, the studies didn't directly measure or demonstrate muscle
hyperplasia. Instead, they just found a correlation between bigger muscles and more muscle cells.
Muscle hyperplasia may or may not have caused this to
occur. And three, most other studies have found that bodybuilders and sedentary people actually
have more or less the same number of muscle cells, which would of course indicate that most
bodybuilders have bigger muscles through growing the size of their muscle cells, not adding new ones.
Another possible way to induce muscle hyperplasia in humans is steroids. For example, in a study
conducted by a team of scientists at Umeå University, muscle samples were taken from
two groups of powerlifters, powerlifters who had used
large amounts of anabolic steroids for several years and powerlifters who had never used
steroids. And after analyzing the muscle tissues, what the researchers found is that the steroid
users had significantly more muscle cells than the natties. So it is very possible that getting on some hashtag dedication
is a good way to cause muscle hyperplasia. And if that is true, it would help explain why people
who have used steroids, and especially those who have used steroids for a long time, tend to keep
at least some of their chemically enhanced gains years after they
stop taking drugs. Okay, so that's it for muscle hyperplasia. Let's move on and talk about how to
increase muscle hypertrophy, how to make your muscles bigger. Now, there are several factors
that affect how much and how quickly you can stimulate muscle growth, muscle hypertrophy.
This is one of the reasons why there is a lot of confusion out there as to the quote-unquote
best way of going about it. Some people say that you just need to stick to the basics,
you just lift heavy weights, and you progressively overload your muscles, and you keep your volume
moderate, and so forth. Whereas other people
believe that you need to make things much more complex and especially as an intermediate or
advanced weightlifter. For example, you have probably heard that at least at some point in
your training journey, you should start training different muscle groups differently according to
their muscle fiber composition, that you should
start including fancy programming techniques in your workout routine like rest-pause sets,
supersets, and so forth, that you should start timing your meals specifically, and start swallowing
handfuls of pills and powders every day. And then there are some people that say none of any of that matters as
much as your DNA, as much as your genetics, and that most of your progress or lack thereof is
going to come down to this hardwired programming that you were born with. So let's unpack all of
this and let's see what the current weight of the scientific evidence has to say. So first,
let's talk about muscle fiber type and how
this affects muscle hypertrophy. So as you know, a muscle fiber is a muscle cell. Those terms are
interchangeable and not all are the same. Some muscle fibers are better suited for endurance
activities and others are more suited for strength and power. So the former, the endurance fibers,
you could say, are technically referred to as type one muscle fibers and the latter,
the strength and power ones are type two. Now the type one fibers are also known as
slow twitch muscle fibers. You've probably heard of that. And these are dense with capillaries.
They are rich in mitochondria and myoglobin, and they are very efficient at absorbing oxygen from the blood, which makes them very resistant to fatigue.
This is why these type 1 muscle fibers can contract repeatedly for very long periods of time.
They also, however, have about half of the potential for growth and power output as type 2 muscle fibers.
Now, type 2 muscle fibers are also known as fast twitch muscle fibers, and their structure and
physiology make them better suited for generating strength and power. They also grow larger than
type 1 fibers, and they contract faster, but they also fatigue much faster, which makes them
less suited to those longer endurance activities. Now, because of these differences, bodybuilders
have claimed for many years now that you can and even should selectively target these muscle fiber
types with different styles of training techniques. One of the more common ones
that is talked about is using higher reps and lower weights to maximally stimulate the type
one muscle fibers, and then using higher weight and lower reps to maximally activate the type two
fibers. This way, they say you can gain as much muscle as quickly as possible. And while the theory behind this approach may sound reasonable, when you start to look beneath the hood, things get messy.
First of all, the idea that different kinds of strength training preferentially stimulates different kinds of muscle fibers simply isn't true.
stimulates different kinds of muscle fibers simply isn't true. Whether or not a muscle fiber type activates during your set depends more on how close you are to muscle failure than what rep
range you use. In other words, as long as you finish your sets relatively close to failure,
both heavy and light weights can stimulate both type one and type two muscle fibers equally well.
Dr. Brad Schoenfeld made this clear in one of the most comprehensive reviews on muscle growth to
date, which was published in 2010 in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research. And in it,
he says, quote, a fiber type prescription with respect to repetition range has not been borne out by
research. Second, not all muscle fibers fit neatly into these type 1 and type 2 classifications.
A large proportion of our muscle fibers share properties of both type 1 and type 2 cells,
and these quote-unquote hybrid muscle fibers can adapt well to both strength and endurance activities.
And what this means is it is more or less impossible to only target your type 1 or type
2 muscle fibers with different kinds of training or rep ranges. The last problem with this idea of
targeted muscle fiber type training is that most of the muscles in your body have a
roughly even mix of type one, type two, and hybrid muscle fibers. Now the calves are a notable
exception because they tend to be about 60 to 90% type one muscle fiber. And this is why there are people like me out there who have calves
that refuse to grow no matter how much you train them. Now my calves are coming along millimeter
by millimeter. This is why though the calves tend to be one of the most stubborn muscle groups that
us weightlifters care about because most muscles have around 50% type 1 and type 2 muscle fibers and
respond fairly well to resistance training. The calves, however, in some people, I guarantee you,
if I were to get a muscle biopsy of my calves, they would be 90 plus percent type 1 muscle fiber.
They just refuse to grow because that type of muscle fiber has a very low potential for growth.
So anyways, what all of this means then is that even if you could target type 1 or type 2 muscle fibers with different rep ranges,
you'd still want to use both high and low reps on all of your major muscle groups to emphasize
both of the muscle fiber types. Now you may have also heard that through certain types of training techniques, you can transform
some of your low growth type one muscle fibers into higher growth type two fibers.
And unfortunately, science shows that that is basically impossible. With enough training,
you may be able to slightly shift your hybrid muscle fibers about 10% or so toward the type one or type two ends of the spectrum
based on how you are training, but that's it. Your pure type one and type two fibers do not
seem to change at all, regardless of how you train them or how long you train them for.
And an instructive example of this comes from a study that was conducted by a team of researchers
at the university of Memphis, which looked at the muscle fiber type of high-level powerlifters and people who had never
lifted weights. And when I say high level, I mean it. The average bench press in the group that they
were working with was almost 400 pounds and their average squat and deadlift were both over 600
pounds. The result? Well, both the powerlifters and the untrained people
had the same proportion of type 1 and type 2 muscle fibers. In other words, it looked like
their many years of very heavy and hard weightlifting had not resulted in more type 2
muscle fiber. The practical takeaway then is this. So long as you are using relatively heavy
weights and you are training in the rep range of somewhere between 4 and 12 reps and you are
regularly pushing yourself in your sets to about 1 to 2 reps shy of technical failure, you are going
to experience plenty of type 1 and type 2 muscle fiber growth. All right, so now I want to
talk about why that is. I want to talk about how strength training affects muscle hypertrophy. So
the first thing that you need to understand here is that there are three primary triggers for muscle
growth. There are mechanical tension, muscle damage, and cellular fatigue. Mechanical tension refers to the amount
of force produced in muscle fibers. When you lift weights, you produce two types of mechanical
tension in your muscles. You produce passive and active tension. Passive tension occurs when your
muscles are stretching and active tension occurs when they are contracting. Now, muscle damage refers to
microscopic damage caused to the muscle fibers by high levels of tension. This damage then requires
repair, and if the body is provided with proper nutrition and rest, it will make the muscle fibers
larger and stronger to better deal with future bouts of tension. Now, it's not entirely clear whether
muscle damage directly stimulates muscle growth or whether it's just a side effect of mechanical
tension, which is stimulating the muscle growth. But as of now, I do think that muscle damage
deserves its place on the list here. The third pathway, muscle building pathway, is cellular fatigue,
which refers to a host of chemical changes that occur inside and outside the muscle fibers when
they contract repeatedly. Now, research shows that out of these three pathways, mechanical tension
is the most important one for muscle growth. In other words, mechanical tension produces a stronger muscle building stimulus than muscle damage and cellular fatigue. These three pathways
to muscle growth also relate to what scientists call the strength endurance continuum, which works
like this. Heavy lower rep weightlifting primarily increases muscle strength and results in higher
amounts of mechanical tension and muscle damage, but less cellular fatigue, while lighter higher
rep weightlifting primarily increases muscle endurance and results in lower amounts of
mechanical tension and muscle damage, but more cellular fatigue. Now, given that basic theory that you just learned,
which style of training between those two do you think would generally result in more muscle gain
over time? That's right. The heavy lower rep work because it will produce higher amounts of
mechanical tension and muscle damage over time than the lower rep lighter work. Now,
this has actually been demonstrated in a number of studies. For example,
in a study that was conducted by scientists at the University of Central Florida,
33 physically active resistance trained men were separated into two groups. Group one was a high
volume, moderate intensity group that did four workouts per week, consisting of four sets per exercise in the 10 to 12 rep range or about 70% of one rep max.
And group two was a moderate volume, high intensity group that did four workouts per week, consisting of four sets per exercise in the three to five rep range or about 90% of one rep max.
Both groups did the same exercises, which included
the bench press, back squat deadlift, and seated shoulder press, and both were instructed to
maintain their normal eating habits and to keep food diaries. And after eight weeks of training,
what the scientists found is that the high intensity group gained significantly more
muscle and strength than the high volume group. The researchers cited two main
reasons for why the heavier training beat out the lighter in not only strength gain, which is not
surprising, but muscle gain as well. One was higher amounts of mechanical stress imposed on the
muscles. The high volume training, on the other hand, caused higher amounts of metabolic stress,
the cellular fatigue that we just talked about. And the second reason
cited was greater activation of muscle fibers. And this in turn results in greater muscle
hypertrophy across a larger percentage of the muscle tissue. And this fundamentally is why I
am always saying that as a natural weightlifter, your primary goal is to get stronger, to increase
your whole body strength, and especially on key compound
exercises like the squat, deadlift, and bench and overhead press, the key exercises that involve
the most muscle mass. In other words, it really is this simple. The more weight you can push,
pull, and squat for a reasonable number of reps, let's say anywhere between 4 and 12,
and squat for a reasonable number of reps, let's say anywhere between four and 12, the more muscular you are generally going to be. And that is why my Bigger Leaner Stronger and Thinner Leaner
Stronger programs focus on heavy compound weightlifting. And that's also one of the reasons
why those programs are so effective. All right, now let's look at diet. How does your diet affect
your ability to gain muscle? Now you probably know
that you need to eat enough protein to build muscle effectively. Most people know that.
Specifically, anywhere from 0.8 to 1 gram of protein per pound of body weight per day
is going to work well for most people under most circumstances. What you may not know is that you
also need to eat enough calories. This is very
important. Now, technically speaking, a calorie is the amount of energy that's required to heat
one kilogram of water, one degree Celsius at one atmosphere of pressure. That's the technical
definition. And the relationship between the amount of calories that you eat and the amount
of calories that you burn is known as
energy balance. Now, energy balance greatly impacts both your body weight and your body composition.
For example, if you feed your body less energy than it burns, you've created an energy or a
calorie deficit that will result in weight loss if it is sustained for a period of time. Now, this calorie deficit, this energy
deficit will also impair your body's ability to create muscle proteins, which can slow down or
even halt muscle growth altogether. Now, the reason for this, the physiology in play is fairly complex,
but the long story short is that when you restrict your body's energy intake, it shifts into an energy conservation or energy triage mode, wherein certain bodily functions are given priority over others.
And although we may feel differently about it, building bigger muscles is not vital for survival, and it also requires quite a bit of energy.
So muscle hypertrophy is rather low on the list of priorities when energy intake is restricted. A calorie deficit can also reduce anabolic and increase catabolic hormone levels, which
causes a systemic shift away from muscle gain and toward muscle degradation. And last but not least,
cutting your calories almost always entails reducing your carb intake, which is going to
result in a decline in performance in the gym. And the less you can lift in the gym and the less
muscle endurance you have in the gym, the worse your progress is going
to be. Now, all of that is why it is commonly believed that you simply cannot build muscle
and lose fat at the same time. And that is not entirely accurate. If you are new to resistance
training or to proper strength training, or you are coming back to the gym after a layoff, you can achieve the holy grail of fitness. You can
achieve a body recomposition. What is true though, is you will never gain as much muscle in a calorie
deficit as you would when you were in a calorie surplus. And also if you are an intermediate or
advanced weightlifter, if your newbie gains are behind you or your muscle memory gains are
behind you, if you're just in the groove, in the routine, you probably are not going to be able to
gain any muscle to speak of when you are dieting. So when you want to gain muscle as quickly as
possible, what do you want to ensure regarding your calorie intake? That's right. You want to ensure that you
are not in a calorie deficit or that you are in a calorie deficit as infrequently as possible.
And that remains true regardless of your dietary protocol, regardless of how you are timing your
meals or how you are portioning your macros. So if you are low carb, if you are doing IF or carb cycling,
or maybe you're just a standard flexible dieter or a vegan or whatever, if you are in a calorie
deficit more often than not, you are going to struggle to gain muscle and strength, period.
On the other hand, if you ensure that you are in a slight calorie surplus more often than not,
you are going to have a much easier
time of it. All right, let's move on to genetics now. How do genetics affect muscle hypertrophy?
Now, for many people, genetics is a rather unpalatable word, is often associated with
things that you want to change, but you can't. And the bad news actually is that muscle hypertrophy is one of those things. We all do
have hard limits as to how much muscle we can gain. However, unless you want to be a top tier
bodybuilder or a fitness competitor, you can gain more than enough muscle to look and perform the
way that you want. Just how much though? You might be wondering. I get asked this all the time. I wrote
an article on it and recorded a podcast on it. Both are titled something like how much muscle
can you gain naturally? So if you really want to dive into that subject, check out the article or
podcast, but I will just summarize here. There are many physiological variables in play, but you can
get a fairly accurate estimate of your natural muscle building potential by analyzing
your bone structure. You see, research shows that people with larger bones tend to be more muscular
than people with smaller bones. They also tend to have higher testosterone levels and gain muscle
faster when they start lifting weights. So what this means then is big boned people do appear to have more genetic potential for strength and size than smaller boned people. Now what qualifies as big boned though, and how do you measure up? structure are the circumferences of your wrists and ankles. Height being equal, people who have
wider wrists and ankles tend to be naturally more muscular and have a higher potential for muscle
growth than those with narrower ones. Now, if you are like me and you don't even need to measure
anything to know that you have slender bones, take heart because everyone can gain a significant
amount of muscle if they eat and train correctly and remain patient. And you probably don't have
to gain as much muscle as you might think to have the body you really want, to have a body you can
be proud of. Specifically, most guys only need to gain about 15 to 20 pounds of muscle to build an impressive physique by normal standards.
Maybe not by Instagram or YouTube standards where anything less than certified meatball is frail and anything above 10% body fat in guys is obese, but by everyday mentally balanced, look good, feel good standards,
adding 15 to 20 pounds to an average guy's physique is going to make a big difference.
And if you really want to go to the next level as a guy, we can say it's probably closer to
35 pounds or so. That's where you really start to look like a fitness model. And in women,
I would say it's probably 10 to 15 pounds by normal standards of muscle added in the right
places gives most women the type of physique that they want when you combine that with the right
body fat percentage, which is generally around 20%. And for women who want to be particularly
muscular, it's probably upwards of 25 pounds or so. Okie dokie, let's talk cardio. How does cardio affect muscle hypertrophy? Now,
if you spend enough time in the fitness racket, you are going to hear this. If you want to be
small, weak, and pathetic, then you need to do more cardio. And there's some truth here. Cardio
does indeed interfere with muscle hypertrophy, but it's not that cut and dried.
You see, cardio hinders muscle growth in two ways.
In the short term, it can interfere with strength and muscle gain by increasing general fatigue
levels, which makes it harder to progress in your weightlifting.
And in the long term, cardio can interfere with
strength and muscle gain by disrupting cell signaling related to muscle hypertrophy.
Good evidence of the first point can be found in a study that was conducted by scientists at the
University of Sao Paulo. To see how doing cardio before heavy strength training affected muscle growth, the researchers split 10 men into three groups.
The first group did four sets of half squats for as many reps as possible with about 80% of their one rep max.
The second group did 30 minutes of HIIT cycling, one minute of easy pedaling, followed by one minute of all-out effort, followed by the same leg workout.
one minute of easy pedaling followed by one minute of all-out effort followed by the same leg workout. And the third group did 30 minutes of HIIT running, the same protocol as cycling,
followed by the same lower body workout. Now, after each workout, the researchers tallied up
the total weightlifting volume of each group and found that the first group, the no cardio group,
performed significantly better than the other two groups.
This study didn't measure muscle growth, but due to much of what we have discussed in this podcast,
it is reasonable to assume that the first group would also gain significantly more muscle and
strength over time if the experiment were played out over a longer period. Now, as to the second point of how cardio can interfere with strength and
muscle gain, the disruption of cell signaling, working out produces a cascade of cellular,
genetic, and hormonal changes to repair the damaged muscle fibers and to make your muscles
bigger, stronger, and better able to deal with future bouts of training, future bouts of tension.
Cardio, however, triggers a very different set of cellular adaptations that cause muscle cells to
become smaller and more resistant to fatigue instead of larger and stronger. The exact
mechanisms that cause this are beyond the scope of this podcast, but the summary is this. Doing
too much cardio suppresses the normal levels of anabolic signals triggered by resistance training,
which reduces muscle and strength gain over time. In other words, the more cardio you do,
the harder it becomes to get bigger and stronger. Furthermore, the longer your cardio
sessions are, the more pronounced this interference effect, as it's known in the literature, is in
each cardio session. It would be wrong to say that cardio has no place in your workout routine,
though. First of all, cardio provides some health benefits that you
probably can't get with strength training alone. And these are primarily cardiovascular benefits,
unsurprisingly. Second, there is some evidence that doing regular cardiovascular exercise can
help you recover faster between the individual sets of your weightlifting workouts, which you could
turn into more work done per workout, which would produce a larger muscle building stimulus.
And third, research shows that doing cardio while lean bulking can make it easier to lose fat
during your post-bulk cut. More good news is that studies show that you can minimize or even eliminate the
negative effects of cardio on muscle hypertrophy by keeping your cardio workouts relatively short,
30 to 60 minutes at most, and the shorter the better, by doing cardio relatively infrequently,
three or four times per week at most, using low impact forms of cardio, like cycling,
swimming, and rowing instead of a higher impact form of cardio, like running, which requires
more recovery by doing your cardio after your strength workouts, not before, and by doing your
strength and cardio workouts on separate days, or at least by separating them by at least a few hours. If you stick to that
simple plan, you should have no trouble building plenty of muscle and gaining plenty of strength
while also including cardio in your workout routine. All right, so now let's get to a
practical summary of everything that we have discussed. Let's talk the best way to stimulate
muscle hypertrophy. So as you have gathered, muscle hypertrophy is a pretty complex subject and scientists
are still investigating it.
And there are still many more questions than answers and still many nooks and crannies
that need to be peered into.
And that's probably going to be the case for a long time.
But we do know enough to say this.
If you do the following five things,
you can gain all the muscle and strength that you want, assuming you don't have body dysmorphia.
So the first is do lots of heavy compound strength training. The second is do a relatively small
amount of cardio. The third is maintain a slight calorie surplus of 5 to 10%.
The fourth is follow a high-protein, high-carb diet.
And the fifth is take supplements that are proven to accelerate muscle gain.
Let's review each of these steps in turn.
So step one, do lots of heavy compound strength training.
Now, there are many ways to train your muscles and many right ways to train your muscles. But when the goal is gaining strength
and gaining size as quickly as possible, nothing beats heavy compound weightlifting. This is better
than workout machines, pump training or classes, bodyweight exercises, yoga, Pilates, and everything
else you can do to develop more muscle definition. Now, what do I mean by this? Well, by heavy, I mean you should
be working primarily with weights in the range of 75 to 85% of your one rep max, which generally
means working in the rep range of four to 12 reps. And I recommend that you work in the lower end of that rep range on your big compound lifts,
which are the lifts that involve several major muscle groups and more than one joint,
like the squat, deadlift, and bench press.
On those exercises, I particularly recommend the rep range of four to six or five to seven,
maybe even six to eight reps, which is going to be somewhere around 80 to 85%
of your one rep max. And then on isolation exercises, which involve just one joint and
one major muscle group, you can work with higher reps, less weight, somewhere closer to 75% of one
rep max. Now, as far as routines go, there are many out there that you can follow that meet those criteria, but I recommend that
you start with a proven classic like the push-pull legs routine, which you can learn about over at
muscleforlife.com if you search for push-pull legs, or you can follow one of the programs in
my books for men and women, bigger than you're stronger and thinner than you're stronger,
which are built around a push-pull legs routine.
Okay, step two, do a relatively small amount of cardio. Now, as we are talking maximum muscle
growth, we are talking about lean bulking, of course, which is what we're going to talk about
in the next step, the calorie surplus. But when you are doing this, when you are lean bulking,
you don't have to do any cardio, but if you include small amounts, it can benefit your
recovery and your health and your body composition.
So personally, what I like to do when I'm lean bulking is I will walk my dog four or
five times per week for about 15 minutes.
Little dog, Chihuahua.
I'll also do two 25, maybe 30 minute cycling sessions on an upright bike that I have in my
basement. And I will occasionally participate in hobbies that keep me active like golfing or hiking
or exploring museums. I live in the Washington DC area. Now, if you aren't sure as to what kind or
how much cardio you want to do, or you should do, I would say just start with a couple hours of walking
per week. Easy place to start. That's really all it takes to get some of the benefits of cardio
without interfering with muscle growth at all. The next step, step three, maintain a slight calorie
surplus of about 10%. I know I just said about 5% to 10%, but I'm going to go with 10% because 5%
has such a small margin for error that you might just accidentally put yourself
in a deficit. So let's just say maintain a calorie surplus of about 10%. This is enough
to maximize muscle growth without having to deal with unnecessary fat gain, which is what will
happen if you start going into larger surpluses. If you were in a 20% calorie surplus, you're
probably not going to gain muscle any
faster than a 10% unless all the extra calories are coming from carbs and you're able to turn the
extra carbs into extra intense training. But even that probably won't make that much of a difference.
What you will notice though, is you are going to gain fat a lot faster, which means you will have
to end your lean bulk sooner, which in the end will probably negate any benefits that you might see in terms of
performance. So what we're looking for here is gaining anywhere from a half a pound to a pound
per week if you're a man and about half of that if you are a woman. If you can do that and see
your numbers going up in the gym, at least on your key lifts, you are doing it right. Now, if you are new to weightlifting, you can easily double those numbers
for your first three to six months or so, the newbie gains phase, but they should then
settle into that range. Step four, follow a high protein and high carb diet. Now, as you learned,
aside from water, the main component of muscle tissue is protein.
Therefore, for muscle hypertrophy to occur, you need to provide enough of the raw material,
the protein, which breaks down into amino acids, for your muscles to grow larger and stronger.
Now, how much? Well, one gram per pound of body weight per day is what most research shows is
optimal for people
in most circumstances. You can go a bit lower if you want, or even a bit higher if you want,
but somewhere around one gram per pound per day is going to be good. You don't have to eat absurd
amounts of protein while lean bulking, regardless of what you might hear in the gym locker room or
read in the bodybuilding magazines. I know because I've been there. At one point in my life, I was eating upward of 400 grams of protein per day. It was disgusting. Now, after your protein
intake, your next priority when you are trying to build muscle as quickly as possible, at least as
far as your diet goes, is your carbohydrate intake. Now, you can check out an article on Muscle for
Life on muscle glycogen to learn why if you search for
muscle glycogen. But the bottom line is you are going to have a much easier time gaining muscle
and strength on a high carb diet than a moderate or a low carb one. And that's why I recommend that
you start around two grams of carbs per pound of body weight per day when you are lean bulking and you work up
from there if you need to increase your calories to continue gaining weight and size, which you
probably will at some point. Okay, the fifth and final point, which is taking supplements that are
proven to accelerate muscle gain. Now, I saved this for last because it is far less important
than proper diet and training. Supplements do not build great
physiques. Only dedication to proper training and nutrition does. That said, there are some
safe natural substances that are out there that have been scientifically proven to deliver benefits
such as increased strength, increased muscle endurance, and increased muscle growth, and even
fat loss. For example, creatine is one that I recommend. It is probably the most researched
molecule in all of sports nutrition, and the evidence is clear in most people. It will help
them build muscle and gain strength faster. It will improve anaerobic endurance, and it will
reduce muscle damage
and muscle soreness resulting from workouts, which means faster recovery. And all you got to do is
take five grams per day. And it is not bad for your kidneys. You may have heard that, but that
has been proven false in scientific research. If you have kidney disease or kidney damage,
or you are missing a kidney, you probably
shouldn't take creatine.
You should probably talk to your doctor first.
But if you are a normal, healthy person with normal, healthy kidneys, you will be totally
fine.
All you got to do is make sure you stay hydrated, which you should be doing anyway.
Now, as far as products go, you can buy creatine monohydrate, which is the form that I recommend
in bulk, or you can get a fancy pants post-workout
supplement like mine, which is called Recharge, made by my supplement company, Legion, which is
what I use myself. It has a clinically effective dosage of creatine along with two other ingredients
that can help you recover faster and better from your workouts. Another supplement that you should
consider taking is protein powder, not because it has any special muscle building properties, but simply because it is very convenient and it helps
you hit your daily protein target easily. Getting all the protein that you need from whole food can
be impractical and drinking a protein shake is very easy. And this is really the main reason I
created and I use a whey protein supplement, which is called
Whey Plus. It is a 100% whey isolate protein, naturally sweetened, naturally flavored. And
there is some evidence that whey in particular is great for post-workout use, but that's a minor
point. If you eat a chicken breast or some Greek yogurt or skier or cottage cheese or whatever after working out,
that is going to be more or less as effective as drinking a whey protein shake. Now, these days,
I should also mention that I like to mix my whey, which I take after my workouts,
simply because I get to the office. It's easy. I don't feel like cooking a meal,
cooking a breakfast at the office. I'd rather just drink down some protein. So I like to take one scoop of my whey isolate and mix it with one
scoop of my micellar casein, which is called Casein Plus. And I mostly like it just because
I think that the tastes work well together and the mouthfeel works well together. There's nothing
particularly special about mixing them, but that's what I'm doing these days. Okay, so two other supplements that you should consider,
which I'll just talk about quickly. I don't want to turn this into a big supplement pitch,
are beta-alanine and citrulline malate simply because they can improve your performance in
the gym. They can increase the amount of work you can do in the gym, which of course
translates into more muscle gain over time. And in the case of beta-alanine,
there is some evidence that it can also directly increase muscle gain similar to,
but not as effectively as creatine. And as far as getting those supplements, again,
you can buy them in bulk or you can find them in my pre-workout supplement pulse,
which contains clinically effective dosages of both along with several other ingredients that increase muscle endurance, increase strength, improve mood, and
more. Okay, so let's wrap up this rather long podcast with a bottom line. What are the key
takeaways? Well, you can spend hundreds of hours studying muscle hypertrophy and barely scratch the surface. It is an extremely
complex process that involves scores of physiological functions and adaptations.
Fortunately, you do not need to be a scientist to have a working understanding of the research and
to know how to use it to build muscle quickly and efficiently. The key takeaways are one, so long as you train with heavy loads and
a moderate volume, and so long as you come close to failure in most of your heavy sets,
you are going to stimulate both myofibular and sarcoplasmic hypertrophy. Two, you may or may not
be able to grow new muscle fibers, muscle hyperplasia, after many years of strength
training. Regardless, almost all of your gains are definitely going to come from increasing the size
of your existing muscle fibers, not adding new ones. Three, you do not need to use different
training methods to target different muscle fiber types. Four, heavy compound strength training is the best way
to stimulate muscle hypertrophy. Five, you need to regularly eat more calories than you burn
over time to maximize muscle growth. Six, how much muscle you can build naturally is limited
by your genetics, but chances are you can gain more than enough to look the way you want to look. And finally, let's reiterate the five-step process you need to follow to put all of that
into practice and build as much muscle as possible. One, you need to do a lot of heavy
compound strength training. Two, you need to do a relatively small amount of cardio. Three,
you need to maintain a slight calorie surplus of about 10%. Four, you need to follow a high
protein and high carb diet. And five, you don't need to, but you can and you should if your budget
allows, take supplements that are proven to accelerate muscle gain. If you do those things,
you will have no trouble building muscle like clockwork. or wherever you're listening from. This not only convinces people that they should check the show out,
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