Muscular Endurance and Strength - Principles of Muscular Training


To have a good exercise program, the seven principles of exercise, described in Chapter 1, must be applied to all muscular endurance and strength training. These principles are overload, progression, specificity, regularity, recovery, balance, and variety.

OVERLOAD

The overload principle is the basis for all exercise training programs. For a muscle to increase in strength, the workload to which it is subjected during exercise must be increased beyond what it normally experiences. In other words, the muscle must be overloaded. Muscles adapt to increased workloads by becoming larger and stronger and by developing greater endurance.
To understand the principle of overload, it is important to know the following strength-training terms:
• Full range of motion. To obtain optimal gains, the overload must be applied thought the full range of motion. Exercise a joint and its associated muscles through its complete range starting from the prestretched position (stretched past the relaxed position) and ending in a fully contracted position. This is crucial to strength development.
• Repetition. When an exercise has progressed through one complete range of motion and back to the beginning, one repetition has been completed.
• One-repetition maximum (1-RM). This is a repetition performed against the greatest possible resistance (the maximum weight a person can lift one time). A 10-RM is the maximum weight one can lift correctly 10 times. Similarly, an 8-12 RM is that weight which allows a person to do from 8 to 12 correct repetitions. The intensity for muscular endurance and strength training is often expressed as a percentage of the 1-RM.
• Set. This is a series of repetitions done without rest.
• Muscle Failure. This is the inability of a person to do another correct repetition in a set.
The minimum resistance needed to obtain strength gains is 50 percent of the 1 -RM. However, to achieve enough overload, programs are designed to require sets with 70 to 80 percent of one’s 1 -RM. (For example, if a soldier’s 1 -RM is 200 pounds, multiply 200 pounds by 70 percent [200 X 0.70 = 140 pounds] to get 70 percent of the 1 -RM.)
A better and easier method is the repetition maximum (RM) method. The exerciser finds and uses that weight which lets him do the correct number of repetitions. For example, to develop both muscle endurance and strength, soldier should choose a weight for each exercise which lets him do 8 to 12 repetitions to muscle failure. The weight should be heavy enough so that, after doing from 8 to 12 repetitions, he momentarily cannot correctly do another repetition. This weight is the 8-12 RM for that exercise.


MUSCULAR ENDURANCE/STRENGTH DEVELOPMENT

To develop muscle strength, the weight selected should be heavier and he RM will also be different. For example, the soldier should find that weight for each exercise which lets him do 3 to 7 repetitions correctly. This weight is the 3-7 RM for that exercise. Although the greatest improvements seem to come from resistances of about 6-RM, an effective range is a 3-7 RM. The weight should be heavy enough so that an eighth repetition would be impossible because of muscle fatigue.
The weight should also not be too heavy. If one cannot do at least three repetitions of an exercise, the resistance is too great and should be reduced. Soldiers who are just beginning a resistance-training program should not start with heavy weights. They should first build an adequate foundation by training with an 8-12 RM or a 12+ RM.
To develop muscular endurance, the soldier should choose a resistance that lets him do more than 12 repetitions of a given exercise. This is his 12+ repetition maximum (12+ RM). With continued training, the greater the number of repetitions per set, the greater will be the improvement in muscle endurance and the smaller the gains in strength. For example, when a soldier trains with a 25-RM weight, gains in muscular endurance will be greater than when using a 15-RM weight, but the gain in strength will not be as great. To optimize a soldier’s performance, his RM should be determined from an analysis of the critical tasks of his mission. However, most soldiers will benefit most from a resistance-training program with an 8-12 RM.
Whichever RM range is selected, the soldier must always strive to overload his muscles. The key to overloading a muscle is to make that muscle exercise harder than it normally does.
An overload may be achieved by any of the following methods:
• Increasing the resistance.
• Increasing the number of repetitions per set.
• Increasing the number of sets.
• Reducing the rest time between sets.
• Increasing the speed of movement in the concentric phase. (Good form is more important than the speed of movement.)
• Using any combination of the above.

PROGRESSION

When an overload is applied to a muscle, it adapts by becoming stronger and/or by improving its endurance. Usually significant increases in strength can be made in three to four weeks of proper training depending on the individual. If the workload is not progressively increased to keep pace with newly won strength, there will be no further gains. When a soldier can correctly do the upper limit of repetitions for the set without reaching muscle failure, it is usually time to increase the resistance. For most soldiers, this upper limit should be 12 repetitions.
For example, if his plan is to do 12 repetitions in the bench press, the soldier starts with a weight that causes muscle failure at between 8 and 12 repetitions (8- 12 RM). He should continue with that weight until he can do 12 repetitions correctly. He then should increase the weight by about 5 percent but no more than 10 percent. In a multi-set routine, if his goal is to do three sets of eight repetitions of an exercise, he starts with a weight that causes muscle failure before he completes the eighth repetition in one or more of the sets. He continues to work with that weight until he can complete all eight repetitions in each set, then increases the resistance by no more than 10 percent.

SPECIFICITY

A resistance-training program should provide resistance to the specific muscle groups that need to be strengthened. These groups can be identified by doing a simple assessment. The soldier slowly does work-related movements he wants to improve and, at the same time, he feels the muscles on each side of the joints where motion occurs. Those muscles that are contracting or becoming tense during the movement are the muscle groups involved. If the soldier’s performance of a task is not adequate or if he wishes to improve, strength training for the identified muscle(s) will be beneficial. To improve his muscular endurance and strength. in a given task, the soldier must do resistance movements that are as similar as possible to those of doing the task. In this way, he ensures maximum carryover value to his soldiering tasks.

REGULARITY

Exercise must be done regularly to produce a training effect. Sporadic exercise may do more harm than good. Soldiers can maintain a moderate level of strength by doing proper strength workouts only once a week, but three workouts per week are best for optimal gains. The principle of regularity also applies to the exercises for individual muscle groups. A soldier can work out three times a week, but when different muscle groups are exercised at each workout, the principle of regularity is violated and gains in strength are minimal.

RECOVERY

Consecutive days of hard resistance training for the same muscle group can be detrimental. The muscles must be allowed sufficient recovery time to adapt. Strength training can be done every day only if the exercised muscle groups are rotated, so that the same muscle or muscle group is not exercised on consecutive days. There should be at least a 48-hour recovery period between workouts for the same muscle groups. For example, the legs can be trained with weights on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday and the upper body muscles on Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday.
Recovery is also important within a workout. The recovery time between different exercises and sets depends, in part, on the intensity of the workout. Normally, the recovery time between sets should be 30 to 180 seconds.

BALANCE

When developing a strength training program, it is important to include exercises that work all the major muscle groups in both the upper and lower body. One should not work just the muscle groups in both upper body, thinking that running will strengthen the legs.
Most muscles are organized into opposing pairs. Activating one muscle results in a pulling motion, while activating the opposing muscle results in the opposite, or pushing, movement. When planning a training session, it is best to follow a pushing exercise with a pulling exercise which results in movement at the same joint(s). For example, follow an overhead press with a lat pull-down exercise. This technique helps ensure good strength balance between opposing muscle groups which may, in turn, reduce the risk of injury. Sequence the program to exercise the larger muscle groups first, then the smaller muscles. For example, the lat pull-down stresses both the larger latissimus dorsi muscle of the back and the smaller biceps muscles of the arm. If curls are done first, the smaller muscle group will be exhausted and too weak to handle the resistance needed for the lat pull-down. As a result, the soldier cannot do as many repetitions with as much weight as he normally could in the lat pull-down. The latissimus dorsi muscles will not be overloaded and, as a result, they may not benefit very much from the workout.
The best sequence to follow for a total-body strength workout is to first exercise the muscles of the hips and legs, followed by the muscles of the upper back and chest, then the arms, abdominal, low back, and neck. As long as all muscle groups are exercised at the proper intensity, improvement will occur.

VARIETY

A major challenge for all fitness training programs is maintaining enthusiasm and interest. A poorly designed strength- training program can be very boring. Using different equipment, changing the exercises, and altering the volume and intensity are good ways to add variety, and they may also produce better results. The soldier should periodically substitute different exercises for a given muscle group(s). For example, he can do squats with a barbell instead of leg presses on a weight machine. Also, for variety or due to necessity (for example, when in the field), he can switch to partner-resisted exercises or another form of resistance training. However, frequent wholesale changes should be avoided as soldiers may become frustrated if they do not have enough time to adapt or to see improvements in strength.