Las Vegas Review-Journal

Cardio before weightlift­ing may help boost muscle

- By Gretchen Reynolds

Riding or running before you lift weights could amplify the effects of the lifting, according to a helpful new study of the molecular effects of combining endurance and resistance exercise in a single workout.

The study, which involved eight physically active men, found that 20 minutes of intense cycling right before an upper-body weight routine alters the inner workings of muscles, priming them to change and grow more than with lifting alone.

The new paper, published in Scientific Reports, offers practical guidance about how you might structure a gym workout for maximal benefit. It is also a bracing reminder of how potent and wide-ranging the effects of exercise may be.

For decades, trainers and scientists have debated whether and how to mix cardio and resistance exercise. Some small studies suggest combining the two might up the likely gains from each, especially the resistance training. (Almost all of these experiment­s have been conducted in men.) But other research indicates sweaty aerobic workouts beforehand could reduce strength improvemen­ts from lifting.

The authors of some of these studies speculate that molecular changes within muscles, caused by riding or running, wind up hindering some of the other desirable outcomes from lifting, an effect called exercise interferen­ce. Muscle fatigue might also play a role since, in most studies that pair cardio and resistance, volunteers exercise only their lower bodies, using their legs both for the endurance and strength training. Tired from the endurance work, the thinking goes, their leg muscles could have become unable to respond ideally to resistance training.

But what if the two types of exercise targeted completely separate groups of muscles, such as legs during the cycling and arms during the weight routine? That was the scenario posed by Marcus Moberg, a professor at the Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences in Stockholm, who studies muscle health, exercise and metabolism. In that case, would the lower-body endurance exercise augment the benefits of the upper-body weight training? Or would exerting your legs and lungs have zero — or even an unwelcome, counterpro­ductive — effect on the muscles in your arms?

To learn more, he and his collaborat­ors recruited eight active adult men in Stockholm and invited them to the lab for measures of their current aerobic fitness and strength. Then, after the men had familiariz­ed themselves with the lab’s workout equipment, the researcher­s asked them, on a separate visit, to complete a two-part workout.

The men began with intense interval cycling. During this endurance exercise, the men pedaled hard for four minutes, rested for three and repeated that sequence five times. After a few minutes of rest, they next moved on to upper-body weight machines that strenuousl­y worked their arm and shoulder muscles.

During a different lab visit, the men completed the same weight routine, but with no cycling first.

The researcher­s drew blood and took tiny tissue samples from the men’s triceps muscles before, immediatel­y after, 90 minutes later and then three hours after each workout. (The primary reason women were not included in the study, Moberg said, was that women’s less-developed triceps muscles make such repeated biopsies difficult and possibly injurious.)

Finally, the scientists microscopi­cally examined the men’s blood and muscle samples, looking for substances that indicated how their muscles were responding to the workouts, with special emphasis on proteins and markers of gene activity believed to influence endurance and muscle mass.

They found them. After their solo weight training session, the men’s muscles teemed with proteins and genetic markers known to help initiate muscle growth. Those same substances also abounded after the workout that included cycling but were joined by other proteins and gene activity associated with improved endurance.

In effect, after the dual workout, the men’s muscles seemed primed to increase

“The most fascinatin­g finding is that some biochemica­l factors evoked by the leg endurance exercise entered the bloodstrea­m and were then able to influence processes in a completely different group of muscles, and in a way that seems to be beneficial for the training adaptation­s in the arms.”

Marcus Moberg, professor, Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences

in both size and stamina, with no evidence that cycling had interfered, at a molecular level, with lifting. Instead, the aerobic exercise appeared to have broadened and intensifie­d the expected benefits from weight training.

“The most fascinatin­g finding is that some biochemica­l factors evoked by the leg endurance exercise entered the bloodstrea­m and were then able to influence processes in a completely different group of muscles, and in a way that seems to be beneficial for the training adaptation­s in the arms,” Moberg said. “It is almost like the endurance exercise performed by the legs was being transferre­d to some degree to the arms.”

But overall, the upshot of the findings, Moberg said, is that starting a workout by exercising your legs and lungs before moving to upper body lifting makes practical and physiologi­cal sense. “It can be a time-effective and potentiall­y beneficial approach,” he said.

 ?? ELIZABETH WEINBERG / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Cycling or running before you lift weights could amplify the effects of the lifting, according to a new study of the molecular impacts of combining endurance and resistance exercise in a single workout.
ELIZABETH WEINBERG / THE NEW YORK TIMES Cycling or running before you lift weights could amplify the effects of the lifting, according to a new study of the molecular impacts of combining endurance and resistance exercise in a single workout.

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