P-ratio

Yes, Siff proposed a lot of theories - some of them have later been proven, but I don’t think this is one of them. I think it was based on the notion of there being different types of muscle growth, e.g. sarcoplasmic vs. myofibrillar hypertrophy - and I don’t think we have solid evidence of this being a real variable in the process. Greg wrote a good piece on it here:
https://www.strongerbyscience.com/sarcoplasmic-vs-myofibrillar-hypertrophy/

...although I know e.g. Stu Phillips doesn’t think sarcoplasmic hypertrophy is even a thing:
https://twitpl.us/f8NN

Agree, I 'think' he misinterpreted what it really was. Instead of 'sarcoplasmic' hypertrophy, maybe it's more 'water, glycogen, mitochondria' etc. The idea I was meaning though, was the irrational hypertrophy where the cell size outstrips the energy systems if they don't supercompensate to the same degree. I was looking at the part you were speaking about WRT mitochondria (atp generation, etc.). 'Standard' heavy training is shown to stimulate very little to almost no increase in mitochondria, the mitochondrial density drops with hypertrophy. It might be yet another area (besides ribosomes and satellite cell donation) that can put a ceiling on continued hypertrophy?
 
Yes, exactly - SC activity (proliferation and differentiation) is the limiting factor in continued growth, and eventually this process is close to non-existent with heavy lifting and training age. So a phase of metabolic stimulus (occlusion/Myo-reps/stretch) may reignite progress (as per my article at Elitefts) through reactivating SC activity.

I also am inclined to believe that it is better to keep the 5s phase as a pure mechanical stimulus, without added dropsets - at least for the last 2 weeks. I think this is what Bryan alluded to in another thread, kind of as an extended SD effect before the real SD and subsequent high rep/metabolic phase of the next HST cycle.
 
Yes, exactly - SC activity (proliferation and differentiation) is the limiting factor in continued growth, and eventually this process is close to non-existent with heavy lifting and training age. So a phase of metabolic stimulus (occlusion/Myo-reps/stretch) may reignite progress (as per my article at Elitefts) through reactivating SC activity.

I also am inclined to believe that it is better to keep the 5s phase as a pure mechanical stimulus, without added dropsets - at least for the last 2 weeks. I think this is what Bryan alluded to in another thread, kind of as an extended SD effect before the real SD and subsequent high rep/metabolic phase of the next HST cycle.

Wow, yet even more reasons to adhere to the HST pronciples of progressive loading cycles of 15s, 10s, 5s. The more I learn, the more I understand the principles and why “typical bodybuilding programs” of always heavy weights, or always training to failure, or always doing high volume are inferior.
Frequency, progressive loading, periodic rep ranges, SD... it all makes sense.
 
Yes, exactly - SC activity (proliferation and differentiation) is the limiting factor in continued growth, and eventually this process is close to non-existent with heavy lifting and training age. So a phase of metabolic stimulus (occlusion/Myo-reps/stretch) may reignite progress (as per my article at Elitefts) through reactivating SC activity.

I also am inclined to believe that it is better to keep the 5s phase as a pure mechanical stimulus, without added dropsets - at least for the last 2 weeks. I think this is what Bryan alluded to in another thread, kind of as an extended SD effect before the real SD and subsequent high rep/metabolic phase of the next HST cycle.

interesting, good post Borge!
What about the mitochondria, are they in any way a limiting factor?

(also, just found this, wonder if this is actually true https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1779717/ )
 
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I would also consider mitochondrial function a limiting factor, for some it is THE limiting factor in their health and daily energy levels - so with the way some people train and eat, I wouldn’t be surprised that the lack of results is related to this. I would be surprised if it wasn’t, actually.

Creatine has been known for some time to be an important part of the SC process, yes :)
 
I would also consider mitochondrial function a limiting factor, for some it is THE limiting factor in their health and daily energy levels - so with the way some people train and eat, I wouldn’t be surprised that the lack of results is related to this. I would be surprised if it wasn’t, actually.

Creatine has been known for some time to be an important part of the SC process, yes :)

OK, very cool. I would guess myo-reps would stimulate mitochondrial biogenesis way more than regular old 3x5 type programs.
Getting some creatine today, been a while since I used it, but now seems yet another reason to try it again.

Thanks for the responses sir!
 
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