The Asian Age

Lifting weights boosts muscle strength: Study

- — PTI

Houston: Lifting heavy weights can enhance your physical strength better than low-load training, as it conditions the brain to send more signals to the muscles, scientists have found. The study shows that physical strength might stem as much from exercising the nervous system as the muscles it controls. Researcher­s studied how the brain and motor neurons - cells that send electrical signals to muscle — adapt to high versus low-load weight training. Muscles contract when they receive electrical signals that originate in the brain’s neuron-rich motor cortex. Those signals descend from the cortex to the spinal tract, speeding through the spine while jumping to other motor neurons that then excite muscle fibres, researcher­s said. The team found that the nervous system activates more of those motor neurons — or excites them more frequently — when subjected to high-load training. This increased excitation could account for the greater strength gains despite comparable growth in muscle mass, researcher­s said. “If you are trying to increase strength — whether you are a weekend warrior, a gym rat or an athlete — training with high loads is going to result in greater strength adaptation­s,” said Nathaniel Jenkins, assistant professor at the Oklahoma State University in the US. Low-load training remains a viable option for those looking to build mass or avoid putting stress on joints, researcher­s said.

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