Questions tagged [hypertrophy]

Muscle hypertrophy involves an increase in size of muscle through a growth in size of its cells. Two factors contribute to hypertrophy: sarcoplasmic hypertrophy, which focuses more on increased muscle glycogen storage; and myofibrillar hypertrophy, which focuses more on increased myofibril size.

Muscle hypertrophy involves an increase in size of muscle through a growth in size of its cells. Two factors contribute to hypertrophy: sarcoplasmic hypertrophy, which focuses more on increased muscle glycogen storage; and myofibrillar hypertrophy, which focuses more on increased myofibril size.

In the bodybuilding and fitness community and even in some academic books skeletal muscle hypertrophy is described as being in one of two types: Sarcoplasmic or myofibrillar. According to this hypothesis, during sarcoplasmic hypertrophy, the volume of sarcoplasmic fluid in the muscle cell increases with no accompanying increase in muscular strength, whereas during myofibrillar hypertrophy, actin and myosin contractile proteins increase in number and add to muscular strength as well as a small increase in the size of the muscle.

Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy is greater in the muscles of bodybuilders while myofibrillar hypertrophy is more dominant in Olympic weightlifters.[1] These two forms of adaptations rarely occur completely independently of one another; one can experience a large increase in fluid with a slight increase in proteins, a large increase in proteins with a small increase in fluid, or a relatively balanced combination of the two.

[1] Kraemer, William J.; Zatsiorsky, Vladimir M. (2006). Science and practice of strength training. Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics. p. 50. ISBN 0-7360-5628-9.

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Benefit of training a muscle at different lengths, the anatomy/bio mechanics theory and empirical evidence behind it

What is the benefit of training a muscle at different lengths portions - i.e. selecting an exercise that has higher resistance at a shorten position, other at a mid-range position, and other at a stretched position - and what is the anatomy/bio…
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What causes newbie gains?

I'm running into a bit of a hard time finding what the driving factor for newbie gains actually is. My google fu is only returning articles explaining at surface level what newbie gains are. The basic consensus describes newbie gains as the…
Eric Warburton
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What is hypertrophy good for?

In so many blogs, videos and tutorials I read and see the focus is on hypertrophy. I wonder why this is the case. What is hypertrophy good for? To better understand the question: People spend a lot of time for training, so I guess they follow some…
LulY
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If hypertrophy is all it takes to build (tear) muscle, why aren't home workouts more popular

Most big guys at the gym say that home workouts cannot increase muscle mass as much as weights at the gym. Eg: a bench press is far more effective at working the chest than pushups. My understanding, given that hypertrophy is all it's needed to tear…
user33409
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Are the idea of 3x10 reps just internet talk?

Everywhere on the internet if you look for gym programs to promote hypertrophy you will see 3 sets of 7-10 reps etc. A personal trainer in the gym i go at has warned me not to believe most of what is written on the internet regarding hypertrophy.
RonnieJ
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Hypertrophy detecting machines?

Per my understanding, muscle fibers need to be sufficiently damaged in order for them to later regrow. How does objectively know whether the muscle is sufficiently damaged? Is there an electric machine/sensor tailored for this purpose?
user33409