Running Research News And Events
February 23, 2010
IS RUNNING BAD FOR MTOR & RAPTOR?
Endurance runners are generally not crazy about the idea of carrying out consistent, progressive, running-specific strength training. Part of the reason for this is a wide spread belief in two of the pervasive myths associated with running- that strength training can harm aerobic development and endurance and that aerobic training makes it nearly impossible to upgrade raw muscular strength. However, research reveals that the "conflict" between strength and endurance training is often imaginary. If you go to the gym to lift weights four or five days a week, your muscles will begin to travel in a certain direction. They'll decide to upgrade their diameter and volume, and as a result your strength may improve dramatically. If you are only pushing weights around in the gym, and nothing more, however, you will sink when you undertake an activity which requires considerable endurance, in spite of your enhanced muscular strength. Your muscles won't know how to behave in a 10-K race, for example, and you'll finish far behind individuals with considerably less sinuosity and strength. On the other hand, if you eschew the gym and simply run at a moderate tempo for about an hour or so, five days a week, your muscles will take an entirely different trajectory. They'll get busy synthesizing increased quanities of aerobic enzymes and higher densities of mitochrondria, and they may signal surrounding capillaries to create bushy new networks of small blood vessels. If there are any fast-twitch fibers hanging around in your muscles, they'll go through at least a partial atrophy and may commence a kind of metamorphosis which makes them look more like their slow twitch cousins. After eight weeks or so, moderate-intensity endurance exercise will be a snap, but a trip into the gym would most likely reveal a surprising lack of strength and coordination. Your muscles would be far different and far weaker, compared with the sinews which would pop out after a steady diet of gymming. Traditionally, many exercise physiologist and coaches have said that these two possible directions are contradictory, that is, that if you push muscles on a path toward strength it will retard their development of greater endurance, and vice-versa. As a result of this kind of thinking, many endurance athletes avoid strength training altogether. This story concerning the potential conflicts associated with simultaneous strength and endurance training certainly goes back to the 1970s, when Dr. Robert Hickson, then a post-doc researcher at Washington University in St. Louis, discovered that the running workouts he was completing with his mentor, Dr. John Holloszy, were causing muscles to fall off his body like autumn leaves (1). Hickson went on to complete a study in which he demonstrated that endurance training had a negative impact on the gains in stength associated with concurrent resistance training (2). The "lesson" from this research was adopted by the running community: If you were a runner, it made little sense to carry out strength training, since endurance-running activities would throttle the possible emergence of greater strength. Furthermore, the two activities were too disparate - "aerobic" vs. "anaerobic" in the parlance of the day - to be joined together in any serious runner's training log. However, it would seem to be incautious and a bit hasty to conclude from Hickson's initial research that all strength training should be cast aside by the running crowd. Indeed, Hickson's own follow-up study, published eight years later, has often been over looked. In that inquiry, experienced runners who had reached a "steady-state levels of performance" (e.g., who had stagnated) carried out strngth training three times a week for 10 weeks, with their regular endurance training remaining constant during this period (3). This research, far from revealing problems associated with synching strength training with endurance work, revealed that the addition of strength training was linked with a 13-percent enhancement of endurance during intense running. Other studies failed to show that endurance training harmed the development of strength. In one of the most ingenious of these investigations, some subjects performed endurance training with the other leg. A second group of athletes carried out strength training on one leg and the combo of endurance and strength with the lower limb. The endurance training was composed of five three-minute bouts of cycling per workout at an intensity of 90 to 100% VO2max, while the strength training centered on six sets of 15-22 reps of leg presses with maximal resistance (4). After 22 weeks (a beautifully long time frame in the exercise-science world), the legs which engaged in both endurance and strength training were just as strong as the lower appendages which performed strength training only. An interesting aspect of this research was that the same leg muscles were used for both the endurance and strength training, and the movements involved (pushing on a bike pedal and pressing a platform) were similar mechanically. This contradicted one view which had been held - that endurance-training's depressing effect on strength would be particularly strong if the same muscles were engaged in both types of training. After all, individual muscles could never go in two directions at once, right? If asked to do so, they would abandon gains in strength in favor of endurance-related changes, just as Hickson's quads lost mass when he became a serious runner. In this study, however, muscles engaged in endurance training had no problem at all with the task of building up strength when they were asked to do so. It is very cool that the movements involved (pedaling and pressing) overlapping biomechanically, suggesting that the development of running-specific strength would not be retarded by high-quality running workouts. To learn more about how to Is Running Bad For Mtor & Raptor? (the full article can be read by purchasing Vol. 22 Issue 8 of Running Research News) and many more running related topics, simply click-on the Back Issues link, and select the volume and issues number, from the drop-down menu. A subscription to Running Research News is another way to receive valuable information about running. SIGN-UP NOW!
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