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What Exactly Is Muscle Memory..?? Here You Go!

WCP

Elite Mentor
During my first 3yrs of training I made considerable gains naturally, made alot of mistakes and learned everything I could about bodybuilding. As my body became more mature so did my training and poundages thus leading me to and injury here and there.

I had often wondered about this theory that people have called "muscle memory", and whats that all about. I realized long ago that any loss I took on a long lay off I got back within a short period of starting back up on my normal routine.
Often with more pronounced results.

So after some digging and research this is what Ive come up with and I think youll find it as interesting as I did.

Anyone who has lifted weights, on and off, for several years is familiar with the concept of "muscle memory". Muscle memory in this context refers to the observation that when a person begins lifting weights after a prolonged lay off, it is much easier to return to their previous levels of size and strength than it was to get there the first time around. Even when significant atrophy (muscle shrinking) has taken place during the layoff, previously hypertrophied muscle returns to its previous size more quickly than usual.

A recent study looking at fiber type conversions during muscle hypertrophy may have uncovered a possible mechanism for this phenomenon. For those of you not crazy about scientific lingo bear with me. Towards the end you will see what I’m getting at with this study. In this study the distribution of myosin heavy chain (MHC) isoforms, fiber type composition, and fiber size of the vastus lateralis muscle were analyzed in a group of adult sedentary men before and after 3 months of resistance training and then again, after 3 months of detraining. Following the period of resistance training, MHC IIX content decreased from just over 9% to 2.0%, with a corresponding increase in MHC IIA (42% to 49%). Following detraining the amount of MHC IIX reached values that were higher than before and during resistance training, over 17%! As expected, significant hypertrophy was observed for the type II fibers after resistance training, and even remained larger than baseline after 3 months of detraining.

Myosin heavy chain isoforms, or MHCs, refer to the types of contractile protein you see in a given muscle fiber. MHCs determine how the muscle fiber functions. MHCs are what make a fiber "fast twitch", "slow twitch", or something in-between. Certain MHCs are known to undergo a change in response to resistance exercise. In this case, fibers that contain MHC IIX are fibers that aren’t really sure what kind of fiber they are until they are called to action. Once recruited, they become MHC IIAs. So, fibers containg MHC IIX proteins serve as a reservoir of sorts for muscle hypertrophy because the can transform themselves into fibers containing MHC IIX which grow easily in response to training.

Like any great study, these researchers found what they expected as well as a little extra that they didn’t. I think this study caught my attention because it showed a long-term alteration in skeletal muscle following resistance training. It has been this long-term change that has been the focus of my own training philosophy, which incorporates what I call "strategic deconditioning". This study showed that resistance training decreases the amount of MHC IIX while reciprocally increasing MHC IIA content. This was expected and has previously observed with changes in fiber type after resistance training. What they didn’t expect was that detraining following heavy-load resistance training seems to cause what they refer to as an "overshoot" or doubling in the percentage of MHC IIX isoforms, significantly higher than that measured at baseline. What does this mean? It could mean that there are more fibers available for hypertrophy (growth) after a lay off from training than there are before you start training. This could very well explain the "muscle memory" effect many of us have experienced ourselves. It may also have implications for natural bodybuilders looking to overcome long-standing plateaus.

There are a few questions that this study did not answer. For instance, they waited until 3 months after they stopped training before they took final measurements. It would have been nice if they had taken measurements regularly so that the optimal period of detraining could be identified corresponding to peak MHC IIX levels. Because it takes 3-4 weeks for these contractile muscle proteins to turn over, it would take longer than one month and probably less time than 6 months (previous research). Still the optimal time remains to be elucidated.

Also, how would these guys respond to the same training regimen after the detraining period? Would their quads grow to their previous trained size, or even further? How long would it take? These questions, if answered, may add a new twist to typical training regimens. It may very well be that extended breaks from training may actually allow greater growth over a 12-month period than if training is uninterrupted. For serious athletes and bodybuilders, this would be important information and could significantly extend their competitive careers.

Hope you enjoyed this..
Peace,
WCP
 
Interesting, I think it is also possible that athletes develop new synaptic connections (maybe in their dorsal column medial lemniscus pathway - which is responsible for all the proprioceptive input, which is how people like us can perform virtually any exercise in the gym in a smooth manner). If you notice untrained athletes, it's kind of humerous how uncoordinated they are. Maybe certain areas of the brain are altered after a certain period of training, for example male and female brains have slight, but distinct morphological differences. Although, I have no studies yet to back this up, but if you're more coordinated, I'm sure you can reep greater benefits out of an exercise (maybe the actin and myosin are better aligned?), and thus get back into the routine at a faster rate. Also, it seems very apparent that, as you said there is definitely some sort of genetic mechanism at work aswell. Good post bro, I've wondered the same thing!
 
do you think that "detraining" or down regulating your workouts offer any benefits for us who are not drug free ?
 
Personally I sure think it does and I think many/most would agree this is a well know thing.

Not even downtraining, take 2 weeks off and come back, I always notice a week to get back into it and them BOOM I'm growing again and setting new PRs.
 
Yes, interesting but irritating that they did'nt measure more results.

I have to say I agree that there is something called muscle memory but it would be hard to prove that you actually got stronger after a two-three week lay-off!

Whenever I take 10 days off the first week back is always the best - you feel strong and full of energy. Week two you suddenly realise that you actually DID take 10 days off and everything is so much heavier. I'm usually not back in my usual form before week 3-4 and THEN maybe I can start progressing.

Crom
 
hey, doesn't Levrone practice something of this sort during the off-season? i've heard he takes several monthes off. probably bullshit though.

also, i've read studies on muscle memory and satelite cells. i'll look for something and post it at some point.
 
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