Prior to becoming a researcher, I was just another diehard lifter strictly adhering to the deeply ingrained rules of bodybuilding. But over the years, the academic in me has grown to question even the most fundamental principles of training.
For instance, let’s say someone tells you they want you to help them build muscle or design a “hypertrophy phase.” You’d probably make it look a lot like this:
Sets of 8-12 reps, 60-80% 1RM, rest 30-90 seconds.
On other hand, if that person wanted to build strength, you’d clearly have them train like this:
Sets of less than 6 reps, at least 85% 1RM, rest 3-5 minutes.
Textbook stuff, right? While these training philosophies are typical of bodybuilders and powerlifters, there is actually surprisingly little evidence to support such distinctions.[1] So a team of researchers and I decided to put them to the test. Here’s what we found, along with the exact protocol we used, so you can try it for yourself!
Why Experience Matters
Numerous scientific studies have investigated the effects of different exercise intensities on muscular adaptation over the years, and the results have been somewhat inconclusive. In most cases, studies were conducted using untrained subjects, and let’s be honest, untrained individuals will adapt and grow following just about any form of resistance training.[2] Even initial strength gains are simply a neurological adaptation resulting in a more efficient muscle-activation pattern.[3]
We know that individuals with more training experience simply will not respond as positively as a newbie. This is often referred to as the “principle of diminishing returns.” Specifically, resistance training does not spark the same anabolic response or promote the same rise in muscle protein synthesis as compared to when you first started lifting.[4]
Therefore, when comparing different resistance exercise protocols, much of the previous research cannot be generalized to a trained population. In other words, it’s time for us to start over and perform our research differently—and some recent studies have done just that.
The Hormone Question
Much of the support for the hypertrophy style of training has been based on the conclusion that these workouts elicit the greatest post-workout increases in anabolic hormones. And yes, the research bears that point out. But…does it matter?
It’s beginning to look like it doesn’t. Recent research suggests that these short-lived elevations in circulating hormones actually don’t serve to enhance the muscle-building effect of a workout.[5] My team also recently put this to the test and analyzed the anabolic activity within the muscle following a hypertrophy-style and a strength-style workout.[6]
Despite differences in post-workout hormone concentrations, the overall anabolic response was similar following both protocols. But that still begs the question: Which training style maximizes muscle size and strength?
The Protocol and the Results
There have only been a few studies comparing bodybuilding to powerlifting training programs in resistance-trained men. In the first study, the researchers compared eight weeks of a standard hypertrophy-protocol versus a strength protocol.7 However, the protocols were “volume equated,” meaning that one group was performing 10 sets of 3, while the other group was performing 3 sets of 10.
Following the training programs, both groups ended up with similar growth in their biceps. However, the group who followed the strength protocol had better improvements in their 1RM bench press and squat. This study concluded that bodybuilding and powerlifting styles of training promoted similar increases in muscle size, but the powerlifting style of training was superior for enhancing maximal strength.
So what would happen if we dropped the volume for a strength group and really put the focus on intensity? That’s what our research team recently investigated.[8]
We used a population of college-aged men who had been regularly strength training for at least two years. Just to level the playing field, we put them all through a two-week “preparatory phase” to instruct proper lifting technique and give everyone a comparable training base. It was the same program listed below, but with these parameters:
All exercises: 4 sets of 6-8 reps, 80-85% 1RM, rest 1-2 minutes.
Then, we split them into two groups, each of which performed the same exercises, but with very different rep ranges. Here’s how the programs looked:
Group 1: Volume Group
5
more exercises
6
more exercises
5
more exercises
6
more exercises
And here’s how the strength group’s protocol looked:
Group 2: Strength Group
5
more exercises
5
more exercises
5
more exercises
6
more exercises
Don’t let the intensities fool you. Both groups worked hard and were pushed out of their “comfort zone” of training, which was exactly what we wanted.
So how did all of that work translate into results? Following eight weeks of training, the group that followed the powerlifting style of training (strength group) had greater gains in lean arm mass and a better improvement in their 1RM bench press compared to the bodybuilding style of training (volume group). Other measures of muscle growth, including total lean body mass and muscle size of the thigh, chest, and triceps muscles, as well as 1RM squat strength, were similar between groups.
The two groups definitely shared more than they differed. But ironically, those differences were in two of the classic bodybuilder priorities: “How much ya bench?” and “How big ya arms?”
Put It To The Test For Yourself
So is this the final nail in the coffin for bodybuilding-style training? Definitely not! It still works; it’s just not the only thing that works.
Two studies have shown similar cracks in the rep-range gospel recently when they determined that even very low-load training can spark comparable muscle-growth gains if performed to muscular failure.[9,10] Our research indicates that strength development likewise shouldn’t be overlooked.
Hypertrophy and strength training should not be considered competing, but rather complementary methods of training.
In other words, it’s worth your time to occasionally break out of that “3 sets of 10” mentality and alter your training volume and intensity to avoid plateaus in strength and hypertrophy. Here are my tips for you:
- Don’t following a training program simply on the basis that it increases post-workout hormone concentrations.
- If your goal is to build muscle, don’t fear heavy weights. You shouldn’t lose any mass during a strength phase. In fact, it may even spark some new gains.
- Utilize a wide variety of rep ranges and rest intervals in your training. Be sure to apply progressive overload to prevent those dreaded plateaus in gains.
Try these two protocols for yourself, perhaps in back-to-back eight-week blocks. Then let me know how it worked for you in the comments!
References
- Gonzalez, A. M. (2016). Acute Anabolic Response And Muscular Adaptation Following Hypertrophy-Style And Strength-Style Resistance Exercise. Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research/National Strength & Conditioning Association. [epub ahead of print]
- Barcelos, L. C., Nunes, P. R. P., de Souza, L. R. M. F., de Oliveira, A. A., Furlanetto, R., Marocolo, M., & Orsatti, F. L. (2015). Low-load resistance training promotes muscular adaptation regardless of vascular occlusion, load, or volume. European Journal of Applied Physiology, 115(7), 1559-1568.
- Moritani, T. (1979). Neural factors versus hypertrophy in the time course of muscle strength gain. American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation, 58(3), 115-130.
- Phillips, S. M., Tipton, K. D., Ferrando, A. A., & Wolfe, R. R. (1999). Resistance training reduces the acute exercise-induced increase in muscle protein turnover. American Journal of Physiology-Endocrinology And Metabolism, 276(1), E118-E124.
- Gonzalez, A. M., Hoffman, J. R., Stout, J. R., Fukuda, D. H., & Willoughby, D. S. (2015). Intramuscular Anabolic Signaling and Endocrine Response Following Resistance Exercise: Implications for Muscle Hypertrophy. Sports Medicine, 1-15.
- Gonzalez, A. M., Hoffman, J. R., Townsend, J. R., Jajtner, A. R., Boone, C. H., Beyer, K. S., … & Church, D. D. (2015). Intramuscular anabolic signaling and endocrine response following high volume and high intensity resistance exercise protocols in trained men. Physiological Reports, 3(7), e12466.
- Schoenfeld, B. J., Ratamess, N. A., Peterson, M. D., Contreras, B., Sonmez, G. T., & Alvar, B. A. (2014). Effects of different volume-equated resistance training loading strategies on muscular adaptations in well-trained men. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 28(10), 2909-2918.
- Mangine, G. T., Hoffman, J. R., Gonzalez, A. M., Townsend, J. R., Wells, A. J., Jajtner, A. R., … & LaMonica, M. B. (2015). The effect of training volume and intensity on improvements in muscular strength and size in resistance-trained men. Physiological Reports, 3(8), e12472.
- Mitchell, C. J., Churchward-Venne, T. A., West, D. W., Burd, N. A., Breen, L., Baker, S. K., & Phillips, S. M. (2012). Resistance exercise load does not determine training-mediated hypertrophic gains in young men. Journal of Applied Physiology, 113(1), 71-77.
- Schoenfeld, B. J., Peterson, M. D., Ogborn, D., Contreras, B., & Sonmez, G. T. (2015). Effects of low-vs. high-load resistance training on muscle strength and hypertrophy in well-trained men. The Journal of Strength & Conditioning Research, 29(10), 2954-2963.