~WHICH FACTORS AFFECT MUSCULAR STRENGTH~
1. Number of Motor Neurons Used
A strong person is someone who has the
ability to use the maximum amount of his muscle fibers at a given moment. The
use of these muscle fibers is carried out by the central nervous system.
Everything starts at the cerebral level:
The command given to contract muscles goes through the nerves in the spinal
cord. Motor neurons then carry the command to the muscle fibers. Each motor
neuron controls the contraction of a specific group of fibers. The more motor
neurons that are activated, the greater the quantity of muscle fibers that will
contract. This is why training should be done with heavy weights. The heavier
the weight you lift, the more motor nerves you will be able to use
simultaneously.
2. Strength of the Impulse Sent by Each
Motor Neuron
Motor neurons can send electrical impulses
to muscles with varying frequency. If the frequency is low, the muscle
contracts sluggishly. However, motor neurons can send a flurry of intense
impulses that act powerfully on muscle fibers. The intensity of your training
develops your capacity to do the most repetitions possible with a heavy weight.
Doing plyometrics also plays an important part in increasing the power of nerve
impulses.
3. Size of the Muscle
There is a strict correlation between the
size of muscle fibers and the strength they are capable of developing. The
stronger a section of muscle fibers that is linked to a motor neuron, the more
force will be generated by a nerve impulse. You can develop muscle mass by
performing weight training exercises with a weight that is around 80 percent of
your maximum strength.
4. Intramuscular Coordination
In a sedentary person, when motor neurons
discharge their electrical impulses, they do so in a disorderly fashion. The
muscle fibers contract in a random, and therefore inefficient, way. Through
training, these discharges become synchronized. The fibers begin contracting in
a coordinated manner. Muscles become more efficient. You can achieve this by
doing weight training exercises with a weight that is close to your repetition
maximum.
5. Intermuscular Coordination
It is rare that you have to contract only
one muscle at a time. Generally, a whole group of muscles is activated to
produce a movement. When resistance becomes greater, the muscles of
inexperienced athletes have a hard time working together in an efficient
manner. You can see this when such athletes do pull-ups. They lean to one side
more than the other. They cannot pull themselves up in a linear fashion and
without jerky movements. The body shifts from front to back.
Through training, the quality of movement
improves, simply because the arms will have learned to work together with the
back muscles, and the muscles on the right side will be in synch with the
muscles on the left side.
This gain in efficiency translates to an
increase in strength. It is the same in all areas of fitness when you have to
learn a new move. It is the volume of work, and therefore the repetition of a
movement or an exercise, that improves intermuscular coordination.
Through regular weight training, an
athlete’s muscles become accustomed to working together. This advanced work
means that an athlete can learn new movements more quickly if he has already
been weight training for months.
In summary, among the elements we have
described, the size of a muscle is just one of five factors of strength. To increase
power and strength, your weight training program must also improve the four
factors that are part of the central nervous system.
Practical Consequences
You should glean several practical
consequences from these physiological facts:
1. Rapid gains in strength that occur when
you start weight training are not because of enlargement of the fibers. They
are best explained by improvements in inter- and intramuscular coordination.
2. Therefore, just because you gain
strength, at least in the beginning, it does not mean that your weight training
program is well structured and that it will continue to help you progress
quickly. Someone who is training well can gain strength if only because he is
learning to execute movements better.
3. A beginner’s gain in strength can be
misleading. However, it is still better to gain strength than to lose it. If
that happened, it would mean everything was going wrong.
4. You will notice that you are stronger on
certain days. The size of your muscles has not changed, so the efficiency of
the central nervous system is the explanation for these fluctuations in muscle
power. When the central nervous system is well rested, it will demonstrate its
efficiency and you will be strong. If the central nervous system has not fully
recovered and is tired, then any weight you lift will seem heavier than it
actually is.
5. These fluctuations in the central
nervous system can create surprises, both good and bad. Before starting a
certain training session, you might feel ready to tackle anything, when in fact
you are not going to break any of your records. However, there will be days
when you feel tired but will be surprised by your own strength because your
central nervous system is well rested.
6. A well-rested central nervous system and
well-rested muscles do not always coincide. The fact that recovery differs for
each makes the task of planning your training that much more difficult.
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