To tease apart the differences it is useful to review what
happens when a person starts doing resistance training exercise and how things
change as they have been doing resistance training on a regular basis for 3 – 6
months or longer.
When a person starts doing resistance training they can make
very quick gains because they are going through a period of “motor learning”
and “neural adaptations” meaning they are learning how to do the
exercises. This process ends pretty
quickly in about 3 – 4 weeks of doing resistance training. During this time strength improvements are
not associated with much muscle growth. Once
this honey-moon period ends people start to add muscle if they continue to
challenge their muscles sufficiently and this is known as muscle
hypertrophy.
How hard someone trains is measured by how close to complete
muscular failure they reach during each set of exercise. Muscular failure is defined as continuing to
do an exercise until you reach a point of fatigue where you can no longer lift
a weight using good form. The closer to
this point that you get the more intense the set and sets done to muscular
failure are the most intense.
For beginners one set to failure can be sufficient to
stimulate muscle growth and strength increases as long as the person continues
to increase the resistance when they hit a certain number of repetitions in a
set of a particular exercise – somewhere between 8 -12 reps is a good goal.
However, as time goes on many people begin to plateau if only
doing 1 set of exercise for each major muscle group. At
this point introducing multiple sets of each exercise is often key to
continuing to gain muscle size and strength.
Number of Sets for Size vs Strength
For more experienced lifters the number of sets and rest
time between sets should be determined based on goals and performance during
each resistance training workout (this is why it is VERY important to record
all your workouts listing exercises done, weight or resistance level used, rest
time between sets, etc.).
A recent study in the Journal of Applied Physiology provided
some very valuable information about sets for strength vs size. The study had 85 people do sets of between
8 – 15 repetitions of single-leg knee extensions with weight chosen so they
reached muscular failure during each set.
Each participant did one set per workout with one leg and four sets per
workout with the other leg. Muscle
size changes were measured with MRI.
60% of the participants failed to gain more than a 3.3% increase in quadriceps
muscle size for their leg that only did one set. For the leg that did four sets per workout
only 19% failed to gain significant increases in muscle size.
Other studies have also found that multiple sets are better
for muscle size. However, research on multiple
sets for strength gains are not as consistent!
In the study above the four set legs did NOT gain significantly more
strength than the 1 set legs. This does
not mean that people focused on strength should not do more than 1 set of
exercise. Most elite powerlifters do
multiple sets of exercise. However,
this does indicate that for non-competitive lifters strength goals can probably
be met with less sets than those looking to maximize muscle size.
What About Set Intensity and Rest Time Between Sets?
Another key point is that studies clearly show that for
increasing muscle size it is very important to come close to muscular failure
or actual hit muscular failure during each set. In addition, shorter rest times tend to be
better for muscle growth for more experienced lifters.
This is NOT the case for strength. Research shows that excellent strength gains
can be made doing sets that “leave something in the tank” and not reaching
muscular failure while also taking longer rest times between sets. This does not mean that strength focused
lifters should never achieve failure in training. However, as a person becomes strong it
becomes more and more risky to use high loads to complete muscular failure –
particularly in major compound lifts like squats and deadlifts.
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