bipennate said:
Do you have that study available to view? I saw 3 studies today at the NSCA conference (all experienced subjects on long term, 8-10 week studies) today that show the exact opposite results, as well as one that is currently being conducted which shows prliminary results that HIT produces statistically inferior results in producing hypertrophy.
The HIT methodology has been disproven repeatedly in clinical study again and again. This is clearly shown in study after study.
Jonathon or anyone for that matter, just curious, did you pull up that study if so can you email it to me at
dan_moore@hypertrophy-research.com , if not I'll pull it up.
Also in that same supplement issue there two others that would be an interesting read
EFFECTS OF DIFFERENT TIMES OF CONCENTRIC MUSCLE ACTIONS ON STRENGTH, HYPERTROPHY, SPECIFIC TENSION, AND TRAINING VOLUME IN RESISTANCE- TRAINED WOMEN.
E. M. Gillies; D. Dochery
INCREASED CONTRACTILE RFD AND NEUROMUSCULAR ACTIVATION INDUCED BY HEAVY-RESISTANCE STRENGTH TRAINING.
P. Aagaard; E. B. Simonsen; J. L. Andersen; S. P. Magnusson; J. Halkjaer-Kristensen; P. Dyhre-Poulsen
Just a quick note than I'll bow out of this as it appears to have been exhausted already anyway.
What Ron and I have wrote in those series of articles is based on viewing many studies by various research groups, the point being is that there are many variables that need to be identified before anyone can say one set is as effective as multiple or the 1X week is as effective as 3. Rhea has a really nice meta on strength gains with multiple sets and of course you can also view Otto/Carpinelli's work showing 1 set is sufficient, so in my mind and based on what I have researched the best is.. do what ever volume you can do that allows sufficient time between workouts, enough so there is no appreciable loss in force and from session to session.
BTW, I tend to agree with Jonathon that HIT has been disproven as the MOST effective training method for growth, strength endurance maybe/maybe not, the whole concept of having to inflict a great amount of inroad is foolish, why choose the term inroad anyway, why not just call it fatigue as everyone else does, anyway, the level of fatigue acheivement hasn't been shown to be a primary cause of growth.
Great work guys
