Login / Signup

Are Trainees Lifting Heavy Enough? Self-Selected Loads in Resistance Exercise: A Scoping Review and Exploratory Meta-analysis.

James SteeleTomer MalleronItai Har-NirPatroklos Androulakis-KorakakisMilo WolfJames P FisherIsrael Halperin
Published in: Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.) (2022)
Participants selected loads equal to an average of 53% of 1RM across exercises. Lifting such a load coupled with a low-medium number of repetitions (e.g., 5-15) can sufficiently stimulate hypertrophy and increase maximal strength for novices but may not apply for more advanced trainees. Lifting such a load coupled with a higher number of repetitions and approaching or reaching task failure can be sufficient for muscle hypertrophy, but less so for maximal strength development, regardless of trainees' experience. The self-selected load prescription approach may bypass certain limitations of the traditional approach, but requires thought and further research regarding how, for what purposes, and with which populations it should be implemented.
Keyphrases
  • resistance training
  • systematic review
  • general practice
  • heart rate
  • high intensity
  • body composition
  • meta analyses
  • primary care
  • blood pressure
  • genetic diversity
  • case control