contentblade.com contentblade.com
   Main >> About Us >> Privacy >> Terms of Service >> Place Your Link >> Add Your Article
Search:   
 
 

The Influenza Diet

Almost all diets are planned...except for this one. - Matthew Keegan
 

Learn The Ancient Art Of Healing Though Meditation

Do you wish to understand how to receive the healing benefits that meditation can offer without all ... - Hayley Jo-Anne Kenwright
 

Weight Loss Recipe: Avocado, Walnut & Crispy Bacon Salad

Losing weight doesn't have to be boring when you focus on bright, colourful meals. What does this me ... - Kim Beardsmore
 
 

Environment - Anxiety & Panic

Is your surrounding environment affecting your anxiety & panic? It could very well be! Read more ... - Joanne King
 

Weight Loss and Exercise in Tough Environmental Conditions

Discover the best way to fit your exercise routine into your particular environment... - Lawrence Cole
 
 

Main –› Health & Therapy –› Weight & Bodybuilding Training
 

Deep Muscle Soreness And Body-Shock Fatigue

 
Author: Marty Gallagher
 

In my experience there are two distinct types of muscular fatigue associated with intense progressive resistance training (only intense training is sufficient to trigger muscle hypertrophy) and these two types should be recognized and understood. The first type of fatigue is direct muscle soreness and is the result of a particular exercise targeting a specific muscle. Scientists are at odds as to the exact cause of muscle soreness but most believe that it is associated with some sort of cellular micro-trauma. Direct muscle soreness is usually the type of pain and discomfort that most folks experience when they begin serious progressive resistance training program.

There are varying degrees of muscle soreness and sometime the intensity of soreness can become so severe as to be debilitating. The muscles are actually sore to the touch. I have self-induced this type of soreness to every degree on every muscle once, as a 14-year old novice, I found a 10-pound solid dumbbell and proceeded to do 50-repetitions in the one-arm curl for each arm every hour on the hour for 10-straight hours. It seemed like a cool idea to my young and dumb mind but that went out the window the next day when both arms locked up to such a degree that I could not straighten my arms. Both biceps were so traumatized that they remained involuntarily contracted for the next 36-hours. My hands were held at my face and any attempt to straighten my arms resulted in excruciating pain. I had to ride it out until the biceps relaxed. This was an extreme example of muscle fatigue but extremely illustrative of this 1st type of muscle soreness/fatigue.

The second type of muscular fatigue is what I would describe as overall fatigue, I call it body shock. The body is a holistic unit and hard intense training done for long time periods has a cumulative effect. After a while a uniform sense of overall fatigue is experienced manifested by an overwhelming sensation of tiredness. This tiredness envelops the whole body. When in the throes of body shock it seems as if you are moving through water. In my experience this type of fatigue is a direct result of an accumulation of intense workouts. Fatigue and soreness come with the territory and if you never experience either version, likely youll not make any significant physical progress.

In my experience, if I dont feel some degree of muscle soreness in the target muscle after a workout I become suspect that I didnt work hard enough or the exercise I selected was technically deficient and spread the muscular effect over too wide an area. In this respect I use controlled soreness (no too much, not too little) as a workout report card. When it comes to body-shock fatigue, to my way of thinking a much more serious type of fatigue, I will cut back on my training and kick up my calories, particularly my protein intake. When body-shock descends training through it is a bad idea: first, training poundage plummets (so whats the point?) and secondly there is a very real danger of fatigue-induced injury.

If you experience severe muscular soreness of the 1st type, avoid training that particular body part until the soreness reduces to tolerable levels. If body-shock envelops you cease and desist progressive resistance training and kick up the food intake. I have found that light to moderate cardio actually helps to dissipate muscle soreness. Accelerating circulation within a sore muscle stimulates recovery, assuming the resistance used is light, easy and not taxing. Use your common sense and be aware that even purposeful primitives paid heed to fatigue.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Enhancing Your Breasts Naturally
 
Questions to Your Physician or Psychotherapist
 
White Noise Machines
 
The Sauna - Ready, Set, Sweat!
 
Obfuscation Rules The World
 
Raynaud's Disease, Tips and Proven Natural Cures
 
Hypnosis and the Treatment of the Agoraphobic Eleven
 
Creatine Works If You Know How To Work It - Build Muscle Fast
 
Avoiding Cholesterol in Foods Won't Lower Your Cholesterol
 
Quit Smoking-Learn How Nicotine Can Affect Your Body
 
 
 
Add Url
 

Self Healing

Medical Care

Travel & Vacation

Online & Board Games

Business & Companies

Academics & Education

Issues & News

Politics & Government

Sports & Adventure

Automotive

Careers & Employment

Finance & Investment

Children

Science & Space

Shopping & Auction

Recreation & Entertainment

Creative Arts

Estate & Realty

Society & Issues

Computers & Software

Cooking & Drinking

Garden & Home

Lifestyle & Fashion

Health & Therapy


 
Main >> Privacy >> Terms of Service
Copyright © www.contentblade.com - All Rights Reserved Worldwide