Bigger Leaner Stronger: Training Strategies for Muscle Building

Have you ever wondered what the best strategies are for building size and strength?

There are various strategies for muscle building that can help you achieve your goal of bulking up and getting beefed.

You might have tried some of them already but with little success. This post is your ultimate resource for all the necessary information about building muscles and will certainly help you come up with the best diet plan and workout program.

As with most things in the fitness and nutrition industry, there are countless “proven” strategies for building muscle. Here, you will learn about exercises, nutrition, supplements and more.

Training

If you want to accelerate your progress and maximize your results, you’ll want to train more frequently, ideally with each muscle group being worked 2-3 times per week. This can be done by splitting your training across upper and lower body days (for example, Monday – upper body, Tuesday – lower body, Wednesday – off. Repeat for the remainder of the week.)

Progressive overload training implies gradually challenging your muscles by increasing the weight or number of reps completed. This will ensure more gains. Progressive overload occurs when the weight, frequency, or number of repetitions in your strength training regimen are steadily increased.

This puts your body to the test and allows your musculoskeletal system to strengthen.

Although progressive overload is most commonly associated with strength training, the same concept may be applied to any sort of exercise, including cardiovascular endurance workouts such as cycling.

By varying your exercises and increasing muscular stress, you can avoid plateauing, which occurs when your body adjusts to the sort of exercise you’re performing.

You may discover that with gradual overload, you feel stronger and healthier…

A progressive overload regimen was evaluated in a 2011 research published in the European Journal of Applied Physiology. Over a 12-week period, the researchers monitored 83 patients while they did a variety of arm strengthening activities.

Researchers discovered that progressive overload — progressively increasing the weight and number of repetitions of exercises — was helpful in both men and women for enhancing bicep strength and muscular development.

Combining complex exercises with isolation workouts to engage numerous muscle groups at once while also aiming for better form and technique will definitely result in effective muscle building. While compound exercises grind multiple muscle groups at a time, isolation exercises strive to fire up only one muscle group to provide a concentrated effort to grow the muscles for that specific area.

 Examples of Compound Exercises (10-12 rep range, up to 3 sets)

  • Reverse lunge to balance with bicep curl
  • Deadlifts
  • Squats
  • Front lunge with twist
  • Push-ups
  • Pull-ups
  • Bench press
  • Shoulder press

Examples of Isolation Exercises (10-20 rep range, 2-3 sets)

  • Dumbbell Flyes- decline and incline
  • Cable Flyes- flat bench, incline & decline
  • Single-Arm Cable Crossover
  • Single-Arm Dumbbell Bench Press
  • Cable Chest Press- incline, decline
  • Cable Crossovers
  • Body weight Flyes
  • Butterfly Machine
  • Cable Iron Cross
  • Low Cable Crossover

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4215195/

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/articles/PMC4592763/

https://www.healthline.com/health/fitness-exercise/compound-exercises

https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/isolation-exercises