Effects of Lifting Weights in Strength Training With No Rest

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Metal85

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Overview

One of the most effective methods of monitoring your progress when strength training is by lifting weights. In order for you to optimize muscular development, it is essential to give your body adequate sleep and rest. Without adequate rest, you will overtrain, find little progress toward reaching your goals and be more susceptible to fatigue and illness.
Rest Intervals

When you are lifting weights, you will notice at times a burning sensation within the muscles you are training. This burning sensation is the accumulation of lactic acid, a by-product of the work load inherent in resistance training. This lactic acid buildup will eventually prevent the muscles from contracting, limiting their adaptation and development. Only while resting between sets will the lactic acid be able to dissipate, allowing for more training.
Other Factors



If you are a beginner to weightlifting, there are certain factors within your physiological makeup that will be affected by your training. This is most notable by the fact that muscle contraction is controlled by nerves. When a muscle is fatigued, it is less able to fire impulses that will allow for contraction. Other reasons for incorporating adequate rest into your weightlifting program are: athletes who are older as well as female athletes usually require more time to recover, and adequate replenishment of nutrients can only be obtained via a rest interval.
Between Workouts

Occasionally you may have felt soreness the day after a workout. This is essentially the muscles responding and adapting to the workload you have placed upon them. This requires time, and the more intense the workout, the longer the muscles need to recover. An effective time for recovery is between 10 and 48 hours, although very intense training may require five to seven days of rest.
Conclusion

Whether you are resting between sets, between workouts or because of an intense training session, your body requires enough of a break to be able to recover and rebuild in preparation for the next work out. In order that you may reach your strength training goals you must allow for proper rest. Without proper rest, frustration will ensue.

<!-- google_ad_section_end -->References

  • Fitness and Health; Brian Sharkey; 2002
  • Serious Strength Training; Tudor Bompa, Mauro Di Pasquale, Lorenzo Cornacchia; 2003
  • Mayo Clinic: Fitness for Everyone; Diane Dahm, Jay Smith; 2005
 
Maybe their bodies just become more efficient at using lactic acid as the fuel. Lactic acid as a by-product to be honest has never made sense to me. How it is people like Randy Couture's lactic acid levels lower as his workouts go on if its not either a fuel , or his body somehow miraculously defies the human body with efficiency if it was a by-product. It makes more sense to me it being a fuel
 
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wiki is not a completely accurate source but.

Contrary to popular belief, this increased concentration of lactate does not directly cause acidosis, nor is it responsible for delayed onset muscle soreness.<sup id="cite_ref-Robergs_6-0" class="reference">[7]</sup> This is because lactate itself is not capable of releasing a proton,<sup id="cite_ref-Robergs_6-1" class="reference">[7]</sup> and, second, the acidic form of lactate, lactic acid, "is not produced in muscle".<sup id="cite_ref-lindinger_7-0" class="reference">[8]</sup> Analysis of the glycolytic pathway in humans indicates that there are not enough hydrogen ions present in the glycolytic intermediates to produce lactic or any other acid.
The acidosis that is associated with increases in lactate concentration during heavy exercise arises from a separate reaction. When ATP is hydrolysed, a hydrogen ion is released. ATP-derived hydrogen ions are responsible primarily for the decrease in pH. During intense exercise, aerobic metabolism cannot produce ATP quickly enough to supply the demands of the muscle. As a result, anaerobic metabolism becomes the dominant energy-producing pathway, as it can form ATP at high rates. Due to the large amounts of ATP being produced and hydrolysed in a short period of time, the buffering systems of the tissues are overcome, causing pH to fall and creating a state of acidosis, a natural process that facilitates the easier dissociation of oxyhaemoglobin and allows easier transfer of oxygen from the blood.<sup id="cite_ref-8" class="reference">[9]</sup>
 
Maybe their bodies just become more efficient at using lactic acid as the fuel. Lactic acid as a by-product to be honest has never made sense to me. How it is people like Randy Couture's lactic acid levels lower as his workouts go on if its not either a fuel , or his body somehow miraculously defies the human body with efficiency if it was a by-product. It makes more sense to me it being a fuel


thats funny thats who I had in mind while I wrote it
 
Maybe their bodies just become more efficient at using lactic acid as the fuel. Lactic acid as a by-product to be honest has never made sense to me. How it is people like Randy Couture's lactic acid levels lower as his workouts go on if its not either a fuel , or his body somehow miraculously defies the human body with efficiency if it was a by-product. It makes more sense to me it being a fuel

I'm right there with you, but some things have never made much sense to me. It'd just explain more if it was a fuel
 
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