CONCURRENT TRAINING STUDY An interesting study attempting to - TopicsExpress



          

CONCURRENT TRAINING STUDY An interesting study attempting to see if what schedule of weight training and aerobics was optimal. The basic finding of this study is, doing aerobics and strength on alternate days was most effective as it was most recovery time between them if one is doing a concurrent program which calls for both. J Strength Cond Res. 2014 Dec 24. The specific training effects of concurrent aerobic and strength exercises depends on recovery duration. Abstract This study aimed to determine whether the duration (0h, 6h or 24h) of recovery between strength and aerobic sequences influences the responses to a concurrent training program. Fifty-eight amateur rugby players were randomly assigned to either control (CONT), concurrent training (C-0h, C-6h or C-24h) or strength training (STR) groups during a 7-week training period. Two sessions of each quality were proposed each week with strength always performed before aerobic training. Neuromuscular and aerobic measurements were performed before and immediately after the overall training period. Data were assessed for practical significance using magnitude-based inference. Gains in maximal strength for bench press and half squat were lower in C-0h compared to C-6h, C-24h and STR. The maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) during isokinetic knee extension at 60°·s was likely higher for C-24h compared with C-0h. Changes in MVC at 180°·s was likely higher in C-24h and STR than in C-0h and C-6h. Training-induced gains in isometric MVC for C-0h, C-6h, C-24h and STR were unclear. VO2peak increased in C-0h, C-6h and C-24h. Training-induced changes in VO2peak were higher in C-24h than in C-0h and C-6h. Our study emphasized that the interference on strength development depends on the recovery delay between the two sequences. Daily training without a recovery period between sessions (C-0h) and, to a lesser extent, training twice a day (C-6h), is not optimal for neuromuscular and aerobic improvements. Fitness coaches should avoid scheduling two contradictory qualities, with less than 6-hours recovery between them to obtain full adaptative responses to concurrent training. ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=The+specific+training+effects+of+concurrent+aerobic+and+strength+exercises+depends+on+recovery+duration
Posted on: Fri, 02 Jan 2015 22:02:20 +0000

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