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Scott K. Powers • Edward T. Howley Theory and Application to Fitness and Performance SEVENTH EDITION Chapter The Physiology of Training: Effect on VO2 Max, Performance, Homeostasis, and Strength Presentation prepared by: Brian B. Parr, Ph.D. University of South Carolina Aiken Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display outside of classroom use. Chapter 13 Objectives 1. Explain the basic principles of training: overload and specificity. 2. Contrast cross-sectional with longitudinal research studies. 3. Indicate the typical change in VO2 max with endurance training programs, and the effect of the initial (pretraining) value on the magnitude of the increase. 4. State the typical VO2 max values for various sedentary, active, and athletic populations. 5. State the formula for VO2 max using heart rate, stroke volume, and the a-vO2 difference; indicate which of the variables is most important in explaining the wide range of VO2 max values in the population. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Objectives 6. Discuss, using the variables identified in objective 5, how the increase in VO2 max comes about for the sedentary subject who participates in an endurance training program. 7. Define preload, afterload, and contractility, and discuss the role of each in the increase in the maximal stroke volume that occurs with endurance training. 8. Describe the changes in muscle structure that are responsible for the increase in the maximal a-vO2 difference with endurance training. 9. Describe the underlying causes for the decrease in VO2 max that occurs with cessation of endurance training. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Objectives 10. Describe how the capillary and mitochondrial changes that occur in muscle as a result of an endurance training program are related to the following adaptations to submaximal exercise: a. a lower O2 deficit b. an increased utilization of FFA and a sparing of blood glucose and muscle glycogen c. a reduction in lactate and H+ formation d. an increase in lactate removal 11. Discuss how changes in “central command” and “peripheral feedback” following an endurance training program can lower the heart rate, ventilation, and catecholamine responses to a submaximal exercise bout. 12. Contrast the role of neural adaptations with hypertrophy in the increase in strength that occurs with resistance training. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Exercise: A Challenge to Homeostasis Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Introduction Figure 13.1 Chapter 13 Principles of Training Principles of Training • Overload – Training effect occurs when a system is exercised at a level beyond which it is normally accustomed • Specificity – Training effect is specific to: • Muscle fibers involved • Energy system involved (aerobic vs. anaerobic) • Velocity of contraction • Type of contraction (eccentric, concentric, isometric) • Reversibility – Gains are lost when overload is removed Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Principles of Training In Summary The principle of overload states that for a training effect to occur, a system or tissue must be challenged with an intensity, duration, or frequency of exercise to which it is unaccustomed. Over time the tissue or system adapts to this load. The reversibility principle is a corollary to the overload principle. The principle of specificity indicates that the training effect is limited to the muscle fibers involved in the activity. In addition, the muscle fiber adapts specifically to the type of activity: mitochondrial and capillary adaptations to endurance training, and contractile protein adaptations to resistive weight training. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Research Designs to Study Training Research Designs to Study Training • Cross-sectional studies – Examine groups of differing physical activity at one time – Record differences between groups • Longitudinal studies – Examine groups before and after training – Record changes over time in the groups Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Research Designs to Study Training In Summary Cross-sectional training studies contrast the physiological responses of groups differing in habitual physical activity (e.g., sedentary individuals versus runners). Longitudinal training studies examine the changes taking place over the course of a training program. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training and VO2 Max Endurance Training and VO2 Max • Training to increase VO2 max – Large muscle groups, dynamic activity – 20–60 min, 3–5 times/week, 50–85% VO2 max • Expected increases in VO2 max – Average = 15% – 2–3% in those with high initial VO2 max • Requires intensity of 95–100% VO2 max – 30–50% in those with low initial VO2 max • Training intensity of 40–70% VO2 max • Genetic predisposition – Accounts for 40%–66% VO2 max – Prerequisite for VO2 max of 60–80 ml•kg–1•min–1 Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training and VO2 Max Range of VO2 Max Values in the Population Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training and VO2 Max The HERITAGE Family Study • Designed to study the role of genotype in cardiovascular, metabolic, and hormonal responses to exercise and training • Some results: – Heritability of VO2 max is ~50% • Maternal contribution is ~30% – Large variation in change in VO2 max with training • Average improvement 15–20% • Ranged from slight decrease to 1 L/min increase • Heritability of change in VO2 max is 47% – Difference genes for sedentary VO2 max and change in VO2 max with training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training and VO2 Max In Summary Endurance training programs that increase VO2 max involve a large muscle mass in dynamic activity for twenty to sixty minutes per session, three to five times per week, at an intensity of 50% to 85% VO2 max. Although VO2 max increases an average of about 15% as a result of an endurance training program, the largest increases are associated with deconditioned or patient populations having very low pretraining VO2 max values. Genetic predisposition accounts for 40% to 60% of one’s VO2 max value. Very strenuous and/or prolonged training can increase VO2 max in normal sedentary individuals by more than 40%. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Calculation of VO2 Max • Product of maximal cardiac output and arteriovenous difference VO2 max = HR max x SV max x (a-vO2) max • Differences in VO2 max in different populations – Primarily due to differences in SV max • Improvements in VO2 max – 50% due to SV – 50% due to a-vO2 Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Differences in VO2 Max Values Among Populations Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Changes in VO2 Max with Training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference In Summary In young sedentary subjects, approximately 50% of the increase in VO2 max due to training is related to an increase in maximal stroke volume (maximal heart rate remains the same), and 50% is due to an increase in the a-vO2 difference. The large differences in VO2 max in the normal population (2 versus 6 liters/min) are due to differences in maximal stroke volume. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Stroke Volume • Increased maximal stroke volume – Preload (EDV) • Plasma volume • Venous return • Ventricular volume – Afterload (TPR) • Arterial constriction • Maximal muscle blood flow with no change in mean arterial pressure – Contractility • Changes occur rapidly – 11% increase in plasma volume with six days of training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Factors Increasing Stroke Volume Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.2 Chapter 13 Endurance Training and VO2 Max Why Do Some Individuals Have High VO2 Max Values Without Training? • Some individuals have very high VO2 max values with no history of training – VO2 max = 65.3 ml•kg–1•min–1 – Compared to 46.3 ml•kg–1•min–1 in sedentary with low VO2 max • Higher VO2 max due to: – Higher maximal cardiac output, stroke volume, and lower total peripheral resistance – No difference in a-vO2 difference or maximal heart rate • Higher stroke volume linked to: – Higher blood volume and red cell volume Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Arteriovenous O2 Difference • a-vO2 max – Muscle blood flow • SNS vasoconstriction – Improved ability of the muscle to extract oxygen from the blood • Capillary density • Mitochondial number Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference Factors Causing Increased VO2 Max Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.3 Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference In Summary The training-induced increase in maximal stroke volume is due to both an increase in preload and a decrease in afterload. a. The increased preload is primarily due to an increase in end diastolic ventricular volume and the associated increase in plasma volume. b. The decreased afterload is due to a decrease in the arteriolar constriction in the trained muscles, increasing maximal muscle blood flow with no change in the mean arterial blood pressure. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 VO2 Max: Cardiac Output and the Arteriovenous Difference In Summary In young sedentary subjects, 50% of the increase in VO2 max is due to an increase in the systemic a-vO2 difference. The increased a-vO2 difference is due to an increase in the capillary density of the trained muscles that is needed to accept the increase in maximal muscle blood flow. The greater capillary density allows for a sufficiently slow red blood cell transit time through the muscle, providing enough time for oxygen diffusion, which is facilitated by the increase in the number of mitochondria. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Detraining and VO2 Max Detraining and VO2 Max • Decrease in VO2 max with cessation of training – SV max • Rapid loss of plasma volume – Maximal a-vO2 difference • Mitochondria • Oxidative capacity of muscle – Type IIa fibers and type IIx fibers – Initial decrease (12 days) due to SV max – Later decrease due to a-vO2 max Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Detraining and ChangesDetraining in VO and VO Max 2 Max and Cardiovascular Variables Chapter 13 2 Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.4 Chapter 13 Detraining and VO2 Max In Summary The decrease in VO2 max with cessation of training is due to both a decrease in maximal stroke volume and a decrease in oxygen extraction, the reverse of what happens with training. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Effects of Endurance Training on Performance • Maintenance of homeostasis – More rapid transition from rest to steady-state – Reduced reliance on glycogen stores – Cardiovascular and thermoregulatory adaptations • Neural and hormonal adaptations – Initial changes in performance • Structural and biochemical changes in muscle – Mitochondrial number – Capillary density Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Structural and Biochemical Adaptations to Endurance Training • Increased capillary density • Increased number of mitochondria • Increase in oxidative enzymes – Krebs cycle (citrate synthase) – Fatty acid (-oxidation) cycle – Electron transport chain • Increased NADH shuttling system – NADH from cytoplasm to mitochondria • Change in type of LDH Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Changes in Oxidative Enzymes with Training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Time Course of Training/Detraining Mitochondrial Changes • Training – Mitochondria double with five weeks of training • Detraining – About 50% of the increase in mitochondrial content was lost after one week of detraining – All of the adaptations were lost after five weeks of detraining – It took four weeks of retraining to regain the adaptations lost in the first week of detraining Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Time Course of Training/Detraining Mitochondrial Changes Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.5 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Role of Exercise Intensity and Duration on Mitochondrial Adaptations • Citrate synthase (CS) – Marker of mitochondrial oxidative capacity • Effect of exercise intensity – 55%, 65%, or 75% VO2 max – Increased CS in oxidative (IIa) fibers with all training intensities • Effect of exercise duration – 30, 60, or 90 minutes – No difference between durations on CS activity in IIa fibers – Increase in CS activity in IIx fibers with higherintensity, longer-duration training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Changes in Citrate Synthase Activity with Exercise Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.6 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Biochemical Adaptations and the Oxygen Deficit • [ADP] stimulates mitochondrial ATP production • Increased mitochondrial number following training – Lower [ADP] needed to increase ATP production and VO2 • Oxygen deficit is lower following training – Same VO2 at lower [ADP] – Energy requirement can be met by oxidative ATP production at the onset of exercise • Faster rise in VO2 curve, and steady state is reached earlier • Results in less lactic acid formation and less PC depletion Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Mitochondrial Number and ADP Concentration Needed to Increase VO2 Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.7 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Endurance Training Reduces the O2 Deficit Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.8 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Biochemical Adaptations and the Plasma Glucose Concentration • Increased utilization of fat and sparing of plasma glucose and muscle glycogen • Transport of FFA into the muscle – Increased capillary density – Increased fatty acid binding protein and fatty acid translocase • Transport of FFA from the cytoplasm to the mitochondria – Increased mitochondrial number • Higher levels of CPT I and FAT • Mitochondrial oxidation of FFA – Increased enzymes of -oxidation • Increased rate of acetyl-CoA formation • High citrate level inhibits PFK and glycolysis Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis Effect of Mitochondria and Capillaries on Free-Fatty Acid and Glucose Utilization Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.9 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Effects on Performance and Homeostasis In Summary The combination of the increase in the density of capillaries and the number of mitochondria per muscle fiber increases the capacity to transport FFA from the plasma cytoplasm mitochondria. The increase in the enzymes of the fatty acid cycle increases the rate of formation of acetyl-CoA from FFA for oxidation in the Krebs cycle. This increase in fat oxidation in endurance-trained muscle spares both muscle glycogen and plasma glucose, the latter being a focal point of homeostatic regulatory mechanisms. These points are summarized in Figure 13.9. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH • Lactate production during exercise pyruvate + NADH LDH lactate + NAD – Increased mitochondrial number • Less carbohydrate utilization = less pyruvate formed – Increased NADH shuttles • Less NADH available for lactic acid formation – Change in LDH type M4 M3H M2H2 MH3 H4 • Heart form (H4) has lower affinity for pyruvate = less lactic acid formation Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH Mitochondrial and Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.10 Chapter 13 Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH Biochemical Adaptations and Lactate Removal • Lactate removal – By nonworking muscle, liver, and kidneys – Gluconeogenesis in liver • Increased capillary density – Muscle can extract same O2 with lower blood flow • Redistribution of blood flow to liver and kidney – Increased lactate removal Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH Redistribution of Blood Flow and Lactate Removal Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.13 Chapter 13 Biochemical Adaptations and Blood pH In Summary Mitochondrial adaptations to endurance training include an increase in the enzymes involved in oxidative metabolism: Krebs cycle, fatty-acid (oxidation) cycle, and the electron transport chain. Those mitochondrial adaptations result in the following: a. a smaller O2 deficit due to a more rapid increase in oxygen uptake at the onset of work b. an increase in fat metabolism that spares muscle glycogen and blood glucose c. a reduction in lactate and H+ formation that helps maintain the pH of the blood d. an increase in lactate removal Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. to Chapter 13 Exercise and Resistance to Infection A Closer Look 13.4 Exercise and Resistance to Infection • J-shaped relationship between amount and intensity of exercise and risk of URTI • Marathon run alters immune system – Elevated neutrophils, reduced lymphocytes and natural killer cells – Decreases in NK and T-cell function – Decreases in nasal neutrophil activity – Decreases in nasal and salivary IgA concentrations – Increases in pro-inflammatory cytokines • “Open window” hypothesis – Immune suppression following marathon increases risk of infection Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Exercise and Resistance to Infection J-Shaped Relationship Between Exercise and URTI Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.11 Chapter 13 Exercise and Resistance to Infection The “Open Window” Theory Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.12 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology • Biochemical adaptations to training influence the physiological response to exercise – Sympathetic nervous system ( E/NE) – Cardiorespiratory system ( HR, ventilation) • Due to: – Reduction in “feedback” from muscle chemoreceptors – Reduced number of motor units recruited • Demonstrated in one-leg training studies – Lack of transfer of training effect to untrained leg Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology Lack of Transfer of Training Effect Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.14 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology Peripheral and Central Control of Cardiorespiratory Responses • Peripheral feedback from working muscles – Group III and group IV nerve fibers • Responsive to tension, temperature, and chemical changes • Feed into cardiovascular control center • Central Command – Motor cortex, cerebellum, basal ganglia • Recruitment of muscle fibers • Stimulates cardiorespiratory control center Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology Peripheral Control of Heart Rate, Ventilation, and Blood Flow Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.15 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology Central Control of Cardiorespiratory Responses Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.16 Chapter 13 Endurance Training: Links Between Muscle and Systemic Physiology In Summary The biochemical changes in muscle due to endurance training influence the physiological responses to exercise. The reduction in “feedback” from chemoreceptors in the trained muscle and a reduction in the need to recruit motor units to accomplish a work task results in reduced sympathetic nervous system, heart rate, and ventilation responses in submaximal exercise. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Effects of Strength Training Physiological Effects of Strength Training • Muscular strength – Maximal force a muscle or muscle group can generate • 1 repetition maximum (1-RM) • Muscular endurance – Ability to make repeated contractions against a submaximal load • Strength training – Percent gain inversely proportional to initial strength • Genetic limitation to gains in strength Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Effects of Strength Training A Closer Look 13.5 Aging, Strength, and Training • Decline in strength after age 50 – Loss of muscle mass (sarcopenia) • Loss of both type I and II fibers • Atrophy of type II fibers • Loss of intramuscular fat and connective tissue – Loss of motor units – Reorganization of motor units • Progressive resistance training – Causes muscle hypertrophy and strength gains Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength • Strength training results in increased muscle size and strength • Initial 8–20 weeks – Neural adaptations • Long-term training (20+ weeks) – Muscle hypertrophy – High-intensity training can result in hypertrophy with 10 sessions Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Neural andMechanisms Muscular Physiological Causing Increased Strength Adaptations to Resistance Training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Figure 13.17 Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength Neural Factors • Early gains in strength – Initial 8–20 weeks • Adaptations – Improved ability to recruit motor units – Learning – Coordination Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength Muscular Enlargement • Hypertrophy – Enlargement of both type I and II fibers • Low-intensity (high RM), high-volume training results in smaller type II fibers • Heavy resistance (low RM) results in larger type II fibers – No increase in capillary density • Hyperplasia – Increase in muscle fiber number – Mainly seen in long-term strength training • Not as much evidence as muscle hypertrophy Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength The Winning Edge 13.1 Periodization of Strength Training • Traditional training programs – Variations in intensity (RM), sets, and repetitions • Periodization – Also includes variation of: • Rest periods, type of exercise, number of training sessions, and training volume – Develop workouts to achieve optimal gains in: • Strength, power, motor performance, and/or hypertrophy – Linear and undulating programs • Variations in volume/intensity over time – More effective than non-periodized training for improving strength and endurance Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength Concurrent Strength and Endurance Training • Potential for interference of adaptations – Endurance training increases mitochondial protein – Strength training increases contractile protein – Depends on intensity, volume, and frequency of training • Studies show conflicting results – Depends on intensity, volume, and frequency of training Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Chapter 13 Physiological Mechanisms Causing Increased Strength In Summary Increases in strength due to short-term (eight to twenty weeks) training are the results of neural adaptations, while gains in strength in long-term training programs are due to an increase in the size of the muscle. There is evidence both for and against the proposition that the physiological effects of strength training interfere with the physiological effects of endurance training. Copyright ©2009 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved.