The benefits of weight training include
greater muscular strength, improved muscle tone and appearance, increased
endurance and enhanced bone density. Many people take up weight training to
improve their physical attractiveness. Most men can develop substantial muscles;
most women lack the testosterone to do it, but they can develop a firm,
"toned" (see below) physique, and they can increase their strength by
the same proportion as that achieved by men (but usually from a significantly
lower starting point). An individual's genetic make-up
dictates the response to weight training stimuli to a significant extent.
The body's basal metabolic rate increases with increases in muscle mass,
which promotes long-term fat loss and helps
dieters avoid yo-yo dieting. Moreover, intense workouts elevate metabolism for several
hours following the workout, which also promotes fat loss.
Weight training also provides functional
benefits. Stronger muscles improve posture, provide better support for joints, and reduce
the risk of injury from
everyday activities. Older people who take up weight training can prevent some of the loss
of muscle tissue that normally accompanies aging—and even
regain some functional strength—and by doing so become less frail. They may be
able to avoid some types of physical disability. Weight-bearing exercise also helps to
prevent osteoporosis. The benefits of weight training for older
people have been confirmed by studies of people who began engaging in it even
in their 80s and 90s.
For many people in rehabilitation or with an
acquired disability, such as following stroke or orthopaedic
surgery, strength training for weak muscles is a key factor to optimise
recovery. For people with such a health condition, their strength training is
likely to need to be designed by an appropriate health professional, such as a physiotherapist.
Stronger muscles improve performance in a
variety of sports. Sport-specific training routines are used by many
competitors. These often specify that the speed of muscle contraction during weight training should be the same as
that of the particular sport.
Though weight training can stimulate the cardiovascular system, many exercise physiologists, based on
their observation of maximal oxygen uptake,
argue that aerobics training is
a better cardiovascular stimulus. Central catheter monitoring
during resistance training reveals increased cardiac
output, suggesting that strength training shows potential for cardiovascular exercise. However, a 2007 meta-analysis found that,
though aerobic training is an effective therapy for heart failure patients,
combined aerobic and strength training is ineffective.
One side-effect of any intense exercise is
increased levels of dopamine, serotonin and norepinephrine, which can
help to improve mood and counter feelings of depression.
Developing research has demonstrated that
many of the benefits of exercise are mediated through the role of skeletal muscle
as an endocrine organ. That is, contracting muscles release multiple substances
known as myokines which
promote the growth of new tissue, tissue repair, and various anti-inflammatory
functions, which in turn reduce the risk of developing various inflammatory
diseases (Wikipedia, 2014).
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