How To Build Muscle (Explained In 5 Levels)

How To Build Muscle (Explained In 5 Levels)

How to Build Muscle in Five Levels of Increasing Complexity

In this video, the speaker explains how to build muscle in five levels of increasing complexity. The speaker consulted with various experts and shares their knowledge on muscle metabolism, biomechanics, and strength and conditioning. The importance of progressive overload and protein intake is emphasized.

Building Muscle Basics

  • Lifting weights and consuming protein are the fundamental requirements for building muscle.
  • Weightlifting signals the muscles to grow, while protein provides the necessary building blocks (amino acids) for muscle growth.
  • Simply lifting weights and eating protein may not be enough for optimal results.
  • Progressive overload is crucial for continued muscle growth, which involves gradually increasing stress on the muscles during weight training.

Implementing Progressive Overload

  • Progressive overload can be achieved by adding more weight or reps from workout to workout.
  • If unable to increase weight or reps each time, other methods like adding an extra set or focusing on better control and mind-muscle connection can still apply progressive overload.

Protein Intake for Muscle Gain

  • Consuming 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day (0.7 to 1 gram per pound) is recommended for maximizing muscle gain.
  • Adjustments may be needed based on individual factors such as body fat percentage.
  • Spacing protein intake across multiple meals throughout the day may have some benefits but is less important than meeting daily protein targets.

Training vs Diet for Muscle Growth

  • Training has a more significant impact on muscle growth compared to diet alone.
  • While a caloric surplus can enhance muscle growth, dietary manipulations like protein timing have less influence.
  • The focus should primarily be on resistance training techniques that maximize the muscle response.

The transcript provided was already in English language format.

Effort and Solid Results

This section discusses the importance of effort in achieving solid results.

Effort as the Fundamental Key

  • Effort is considered the most fundamental aspect in achieving solid results.
  • Putting in consistent effort leads to significant progress over time.

Mechanosensors and Muscle Growth

This section explains how mechanosensors play a role in muscle growth.

Signaling Mechanism

  • Mechanosensors send signals when lifting weights.
  • The same weight lifted repeatedly triggers a signaling pathway involving a molecule called mTOR.
  • mTOR regulates cellular growth, including muscle tissue growth.

Implications for Muscle Growth

  • Muscle growth requires more than just lifting weights; it involves keeping the muscles growing.
  • mTOR's role extends beyond muscle tissue and is also implicated in cancer development.
  • Continual stimulation of mTOR is necessary for muscle growth.

Blueprints for Muscle Building

This section discusses the process of building new muscle through protein synthesis.

Blueprint Transmission

  • Blueprints for building new muscle are sent to ribosomes, which act as protein-building factories.
  • Ribosomes synthesize proteins based on the blueprint provided by messenger RNA (mRNA).

Progressive Overload and Protein Synthesis

  • Progressive overload, gradually increasing stress on muscles, stimulates muscle protein synthesis.
  • Increasing weight or reps during weight training triggers translation, where amino acids are incorporated into new proteins.

Applying Progressive Overload

This section explores different ways to apply progressive overload for continued muscle growth.

Varying Training Parameters

  • To continue stimulating muscle protein synthesis, it is important to progressively increase training parameters over time.
  • Example: Starting with three sets of ten reps and gradually increasing to three sets of twelve reps.
  • If the rate of protein synthesis exceeds breakdown, protein balance is positive, leading to muscle growth.

Myofibrillar Hypertrophy

  • Myofibrillar hypertrophy occurs when muscle fibers increase in size due to increased contractile proteins.
  • At a certain point, it may become challenging to increase weight or reps, but other methods of progressive overload can still be applied.

Nutrition and Muscle Growth

This section discusses the role of nutrition in stimulating muscle growth.

Amino Acids and mTOR Activation

  • Amino acids, particularly leucine, play a role in triggering mTOR activation during weightlifting.
  • Consuming about 3 grams of leucine can stimulate mTOR and initiate the muscle-building process.

Protein Intake

  • Consuming approximately 20 to 25 grams of high-quality protein after workouts helps support muscle growth.
  • Recent research suggests that consuming between 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight yields optimal anabolic responses.

The transcript provided does not cover the entire video.

Protein Intake for Muscle Growth

This section discusses the recommended protein intake for maximizing muscle growth and the role of leucine in stimulating muscle protein synthesis.

Protein Intake and Leucine

  • The recommended protein intake for maximizing muscle growth is about 0.7 to 1 gram per pound of body weight.
  • Leucine, an essential amino acid, plays a crucial role in stimulating muscle protein synthesis.
  • To achieve maximum mTOR (mammalian target of rapamycin) stimulation, it is suggested to consume around 120 to 165 grams of protein per day.
  • Higher leucine intake can complement the stimulative effects of weight training, especially in advanced situations.

Body Fat and Protein Utilization

  • If you have high body fat levels, the effectiveness of including leucine in your diet may be reduced.
  • Very high protein intake, such as consuming 300 grams per day for a person weighing 300 pounds, may not be necessary for muscle building.
  • A daily protein target of one gram per pound of body weight is generally sufficient for most individuals.

Testosterone and Muscle Growth

  • Testosterone plays a relatively minor role in muscle growth within the natural range.
  • Modifying testosterone levels independently of body fat percentage has limited impact on muscle growth.
  • Injecting high-dose testosterone can bind to androgen receptors in muscles but does not significantly contribute to muscle growth.

Sarcoplasmic Hypertrophy

  • Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy refers to the growth of non-contractile components inside the muscle fiber, such as glycogen and organelles.
  • While myofibrillar hypertrophy (growth of actual contractile tissue) is primarily driven by progressive overload through resistance training, sarcoplasmic hypertrophy can also have some impact on overall muscle size.

Considerations for Muscle Growth

  • Training is a more powerful contributor to muscle growth than diet.
  • Factors such as training intensity, volume, and rep ranges may influence the bias towards sarcoplasmic hypertrophy.
  • The research on optimal training parameters for maximizing muscle growth is still limited and subject to individual variation.

Conclusion

This section concludes the discussion by emphasizing the importance of progressive overload in muscle growth and acknowledging the limitations of current knowledge regarding optimal training parameters.

Progressive Overload and Muscle Growth

  • Progressive overload, achieved through increasing resistance or intensity over time, remains a key factor in promoting muscle growth.
  • While dietary manipulations like protein intake can support muscle growth, they are secondary to the impact of progressive overload through resistance training.

Limitations of Current Knowledge

  • The specific details of how hard to push muscles, number of sets, reps, and weight selection are still open to speculation and may vary among individuals.
  • Sarcoplasmic hypertrophy and its relationship with training variables require further research for a better understanding.

The transcript provided does not cover all aspects discussed in the video. It is recommended to watch the full video for a comprehensive understanding.

Desenvolvimento Muscular: Tensão Mecânica, Dano Muscular e Estresse Metabólico

Nesta seção, o palestrante discute os principais fatores que impulsionam o crescimento muscular: tensão mecânica, dano muscular e estresse metabólico. Ele explora cada um desses fatores em detalhes e fornece insights sobre sua importância no desenvolvimento muscular.

Fatores do Crescimento Muscular

  • A tensão mecânica é considerada o principal impulsionador do crescimento muscular. É a força que estica as fibras musculares durante a contração.
  • O dano muscular refere-se aos danos físicos causados às fibras musculares durante o treinamento, como microlesões e interrupções celulares.
  • O estresse metabólico envolve a acumulação de metabólitos como lactato e íons de hidrogênio no músculo durante o treinamento.

Tensão Mecânica

  • A tensão mecânica é gerada quando as fibras musculares são esticadas ou contraídas durante o exercício.
  • A tensão mecânica é amplamente aceita como o principal impulsionador do crescimento muscular dentro da comunidade científica.

Dano Muscular

  • O dano muscular ocorre quando há danos físicos nas fibras musculares durante o treinamento.
  • Estudos mostram que o dano muscular não está diretamente relacionado ao crescimento muscular a longo prazo.
  • A síntese de proteínas musculares após o treinamento inicialmente se concentra na reparação do tecido muscular danificado, e somente depois disso é direcionada para o crescimento muscular.

Estresse Metabólico

  • O estresse metabólico refere-se à acumulação de metabólitos no músculo durante o treinamento, como lactato e íons de hidrogênio.
  • O estresse metabólico pode estar associado à sensação de "pump" durante os treinos com repetições altas.

Progressive Overload and Acute Training Variables

Nesta seção, o palestrante discute a importância da sobrecarga progressiva e das variáveis agudas de treinamento no desenvolvimento muscular. Ele também menciona outros fatores, como períodos de descanso, tempo de levantamento e técnicas avançadas de intensidade.

Sobrecarga Progressiva

  • A sobrecarga progressiva é fundamental para estimular o crescimento muscular. Envolve aumentar gradualmente a carga ou a dificuldade do exercício ao longo do tempo.

Variáveis Agudas de Treinamento

  • Além da sobrecarga progressiva, existem outras variáveis importantes no treinamento, como períodos de descanso entre as séries, tempo de levantamento (tempo sob tensão) e técnicas avançadas de intensidade.

Modelo dos Três Fatores do Crescimento Muscular

Nesta seção, o palestrante apresenta o modelo dos três fatores do crescimento muscular proposto pelo Dr. Brad Schoenfeld: tensão mecânica, dano muscular e estresse metabólico.

Modelo dos Três Fatores

  • O modelo propõe que a tensão mecânica, o dano muscular e o estresse metabólico são os principais impulsionadores do crescimento muscular.

Tensão Mecânica

  • A tensão mecânica é a força que estica as fibras musculares durante a contração. É considerada o principal impulsionador do crescimento muscular.

Dano Muscular

  • O dano muscular refere-se aos danos físicos causados às fibras musculares durante o treinamento. Estudos mostram que não está diretamente relacionado ao crescimento muscular a longo prazo.

Estresse Metabólico

  • O estresse metabólico envolve a acumulação de metabólitos no músculo durante o treinamento. Pode estar associado à sensação de "pump" durante os treinos com repetições altas.

Muscle Damage and Muscle Growth

Nesta seção, o palestrante discute a relação entre dano muscular e crescimento muscular. Ele aborda a ideia equivocada de que causar danos musculares significativos é essencial para promover o crescimento.

Relação entre Dano Muscular e Crescimento Muscular

  • A crença de que causar danos musculares é essencial para o crescimento muscular é questionável.
  • Estudos mostram que o dano muscular não está diretamente relacionado ao crescimento muscular a longo prazo.
  • A síntese de proteínas musculares após o treinamento inicialmente se concentra na reparação do tecido muscular danificado, e somente depois disso é direcionada para o crescimento muscular.

Metabolic Stress and Muscle Growth

Nesta seção, o palestrante explora a relação entre estresse metabólico e crescimento muscular. Ele discute como o acúmulo de metabólitos no músculo durante o treinamento pode influenciar os resultados.

Estresse Metabólico e Crescimento Muscular

  • O estresse metabólico refere-se à acumulação de metabólitos no músculo durante o treinamento.
  • Embora a relação exata entre estresse metabólico e crescimento muscular ainda não seja totalmente compreendida, alguns argumentam que ele desempenha um papel importante nos resultados do treinamento.

The transcript provided is in Portuguese.

Muscle Building Basics

This section provides an introduction to muscle building and the factors that contribute to muscle growth.

The Importance of Nutrition and Protein Intake

  • Proper nutrition, including sufficient protein intake, is essential for muscle building.
  • Amino acids obtained from protein-rich foods are the building blocks for muscle growth.
  • Consuming protein helps provide the necessary nutrients for muscles to grow.

Progressive Overload and Training Techniques

  • Progressive overload is crucial for muscle growth, involving gradually increasing the stress placed on muscles during workouts.
  • Varying training techniques such as adding weight, increasing reps, or changing exercises can help stimulate muscle growth.

Protein Intake Recommendations

  • It is recommended to consume between 1.6 to 2.2 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight per day for optimal muscle growth.
  • The number of meals consumed throughout the day may vary based on individual preferences and goals.

Factors Influencing Muscle Growth

  • While nutrition plays a significant role in muscle growth, training intensity and effort are also important factors.
  • Pushing muscles close to failure during workouts can optimize results but does not necessarily require reaching complete muscular failure in every set.

Volume and Exercise Selection

  • Acute volume (number of sets multiplied by reps) is a key driver of hypertrophy but has its limits in terms of effectiveness.
  • Exercise selection should be based on individual goals and preferences, with compound movements like squats, presses, and rows being beneficial for overall muscle growth.

Conclusion

  • Building muscle requires a combination of proper nutrition, progressive overload training techniques, and adequate protein intake.

Muscle Growth

This section discusses the factors influencing muscle growth and the importance of tension in maximizing muscle growth.

Factors Affecting Muscle Growth

  • Rest periods: Longer rest periods result in more muscle growth compared to shorter rest periods. Partial range of motion training may cause more metabolic stress but less muscle growth compared to full range of motion training.
  • Longer rest periods result in more muscle growth than shorter rest periods.
  • Partial range of motion training causes more metabolic stress but often less muscle growth than full range of motion training.
  • Blood flow restriction (BFR) training: BFR alone does not enhance hypertrophy and requires suboptimal training methods to have any effect on muscle growth.
  • Blood flow restriction training does not enhance hypertrophy on its own and requires suboptimal training methods to be effective.

Importance of Tension for Muscle Growth

  • Consensus is converging on tension as the primary driver of muscle growth.
  • Tension is considered the primary driver of muscle growth.
  • Progressive tension increases are necessary for maximizing intramuscular tension over time.
  • Progressive overload and acute training variables should be used to increase intramuscular tension over time.
  • Other factors such as mind-muscle connection and eccentric control can also help increase intramuscular tension.
  • Mind-muscle connection and eccentric control can increase intramuscular tension.

Mechanical Tension to Biochemical Signal

This section explains how mechanical tension leads to a biochemical signal that triggers muscle growth.

Domino Effect

  • Mechanical tension within the muscles creates a stimulus, which is sensed by mechanosensors.
  • Mechanical tension within the muscles creates a stimulus.
  • Mechanosensors pass on the signal to mTOR, a molecule responsible for cellular growth.
  • Mechanosensors pass on the signal to mTOR.
  • mTOR goes to the nucleus and instructs DNA machinery to produce messenger RNA (mRNA) strands, which act as blueprints for building new muscle.
  • mTOR instructs DNA machinery to produce mRNA strands.
  • Ribosomes use the mRNA blueprints to synthesize proteins through translation, leading to muscle protein synthesis.
  • Ribosomes synthesize proteins based on mRNA blueprints.

Protein Synthesis and Muscle Growth

  • Muscle protein synthesis involves the production of various proteins, including contractile proteins that contribute to myofibrillar hypertrophy.
  • Muscle protein synthesis leads to myofibrillar hypertrophy and increased muscle size.
  • Amino acids from dietary protein play a role in triggering this pathway.
  • Amino acids from dietary protein trigger muscle growth pathway.

The transcript does not provide timestamps for every bullet point, so some are omitted due to lack of timestamp information.

mtor activity higher with more leucine

This section discusses the relationship between mtor activity and the consumption of leucine.

mtor activity and leucine

  • mtor activity is higher when there is an increased consumption of leucine.
Video description

Explaining how to gain muscle in 5 levels of increasing complexity. Download my FREE Comeback Program here: https://jeffnippard.com/comeback-program/ Get my Ultimate Guide To Body Recomposition here: https://shop.jeffnippard.com/product/the-ultimate-guide-to-body-recomposition/ If you're still in your first 1-2 years of lifting, I strongly recommend running my Fundamentals Program: https://shop.jeffnippard.com/product/fundamentals-hypertrophy-program/ ------------------------------- Help SUPPORT the channel by: 1. Trying one of my training programs: → http://www.jeffnippard.com/programs 2. Checking out what my sponsors have to offer: ▹ MASS (Monthly Research Review) ‣ https://bit.ly/jeffMASS ‣ Only $25/month (pre-paid yearly) ▹ PEScience Supplements ‣ https://www.PEScience.com ‣ Use discount code JEFF to save $$ ▹ RISE Training Gear and Sportwear ‣ http://rise.ca/jeff ‣ Use discount code JEFF to save 10% ------------------------------- In this video I'm explaining how to build muscle in 5 levels of increasing difficulty from Noob to Pro. The first level covers the basics: you need to lift and eat protein. Level 2 goes one layer deeper covering progressive overload and daily protein intake (how much protein per day?). Level 3 covers effort, training volume, intensity, exercise selection and frequency. Level 4 gets more granular, describing exactly what causes muscle growth through a critical evaluation of the three-factor model (mechanical tension, muscle damage and metabolic stress). On this level, we address questions like "what role does soreness play in hypertrophy?" and "how much is the pump driving muscle growth?" Level 5 is a deep dive into the biochemistry of muscle growth: the physiological impacts of tension, amino acids (leucine, EAAs) and testosterone. 0:00 - Introducing the levels 0:30 - Level 1: Noob 1:25 - Level 2: Novice 4:23 - Level 3: Average 10:03 - Level 4: Elite 15:50 - Level 5: Pro ------------------------------- References: Total Daily Protein Target: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28698222/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5828430/ Training Volume: https://www.strongerbyscience.com/the-new-approach-to-training-volume/ Training Intensity: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29564973/ Training Frequency: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30558493/ Rest Periods: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NR94rNsArv0 Tempo: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TQxMvpe2lQ8 Intensity Techniques: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ri0v5-osLCQ Mechanisms of Muscle Hypertrophy: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20847704/ Muscle Damage: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30335577/ https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29282529/ *Footnote on Metabolic Stress: While I personally think it makes the most sense, it actually isn't perfectly clear if shorter rest periods do in fact increase metabolic stress compared to longer rest periods. For example, this study (https://sites.kowsarpub.com/asjsm/articles/57500.html) found that blood lactate levels increased similarly during a full-body workout when resting either 30, 60, or 120 seconds between sets. Still, since this study only measured lactate levels and not H+, hypoxia, phosphate, etc. I think the assumption that shorter rest periods would lead to more metabolic stress (via increased fatigue) is nonetheless a reasonable assumption in the absence of direct empirical data. *Footnote on BFR: Some might argue that BFR does actually enhance muscle hypertrophy, however, if that effect exists, metabolic stress hasn't been shown to be the main causative factor. Plus, BFR only seems to augment hypertrophy if the training methods are suboptimal (both light weights and far from failure). Blood Flow Restriction: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30694972/ Costameres: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12556452/ Titin: https://pdb101.rcsb.org/motm/185 Filamins: https://www.mdpi.com/2411-5142/1/1/90 Hypertrophy Stimuli and Sensors: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30335577/ mTOR: https://www.rcsb.org/3d-view/5FLC Sarcoplasmic Hypertrophy: https://www.strongerbyscience.com/sarcoplasmic-vs-myofibrillar-hypertrophy This video was inspired by the "5 Levels" series on Wired: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCftwRNsjfRo08xYE31tkiyw Helpful video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=voMnQr7sfmk Music: Bankrupt Beats: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr4OlbPX24EjWIniK7tj0VA Written by me Edited by me Filmed by Daniel Cooper, Stephanie Buttermore and me Thanks for Jorn Trommelen, Andrew Vigotsky and Eric Helms for their help! ------------------------------- Disclaimers: Jeff Nippard is not a doctor or a medical professional. Always consult a physician before starting any exercise program. Use of this information is strictly at your own risk. Jeff Nippard will not assume any liability for direct or indirect losses or damages that may result from the use of information contained in this video including but not limited to economic loss, injury, illness or death.