This is the Absolute Best Way to Build Muscle, According to Science

Science has tested exactly what it takes to tone up, so you don’t have to.

Best way to build musclePhoto: Shutterstock

Getting ultimate gains doesn’t need to be a guessing game. Science has your back…and your shoulders…and your biceps.

According to researchers at McMaster University, the best way to build muscle may come in many different forms. Their study, published in the Journal of Applied Physiology, found that lifting heavy or light weights are both equally effective at bulking you up. (Here’s what you need to know about delayed onset muscle soreness.)

For the study, about 50 experienced male lifters participated in a 12-week resistance training program. They did the same workouts each day, including barbell bench presses, biceps curls, leg presses, and knee extensions, among other exercises. While half of the subjects lifted heavy weights—75 to 90 per cent of their one-rep maximums for 8 to 12 reps per set—the other half lifted only 30 to 50 per cent of their one-rep maxes for 20 to 25 reps per set. ((Here are eight ways to bring exercise back into your life.)

Despite their different regimens, the men in both groups gained, on average, 2.4 pounds of muscle. Researchers also reported no significant difference between the two groups’ growth in the size of their muscle fibres.

How could this be? Turns out, when it comes to building muscle, your body’s response matters more than the type of exercise you do. Maximizing muscle growth requires activating as many of your muscle fibres as possible, study author Stuart Phillips, Ph.D., told Men’s Health. While you use your smallest (also called type I) muscle fibres for easy, day-to-day activities and light exercise, the larger, type II muscle fibres are used when the demand on your muscles increases and the type I fibres tire out. This study says you can activate those type II fibres by either increasing the weight you lift or the number of reps you do. (To prevent belly fat as you age, try these eight exercises.)

“People say that lifting heavier loads is the only way you can recruit type II fibres, but that’s just not true,” Phillips says. “You can recruit type II muscle fibres by induction of fatigue.”

Of course, each approach has its pros and cons. Although lighter weights provide more options for exercises, they might not be as good at building strength in the long run, according to Phillips. On the other hand, heavy weights can be tough on your joints, tendons, and ligaments, so switching to lighter weights occasionally might give them a much-needed break.

Although the study remains mum on the effects for women, research shows that weightlifting has loads of health benefits for both sexes. Ready to get started? These household items are fitness equipment in disguise.

Plus: 10 Things That Happen to Your Body When You Start Walking 10,000 Steps a Day

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Originally Published on Reader's Digest