If only. “It takes a lot of time to build appreciable muscle,” explains Minnesota-based exercise physiologist Mike T. Nelson, Ph.D., C.S.C.S. “At best, you’re looking at about a pound or two of muscle gained per month.” Yes. That means those strutting sirloins have been pumping iron for a lot of months.
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The good news is that, the further from jacked you currently are, the faster you can make gains in that general direction. “People who are new can do all sorts of stupid stuff and still make progress,” Nelson says. “After some training experience, or roughly six months of lifting, though, it’s going to take increasingly more work.” In one study from the University of Central Missouri, experienced lifters gained an average of 2.18 to 2.33 pounds of muscle over the course of an eight-week training program.
Building muscle becomes increasingly challenging over time because each person has a pre-set “upper limit” to how much muscle they can amass.
“Once you get to a point where your muscle levels are relatively functional for day-to day activities, there’s not a lot of advantage from a survival standpoint to carrying more shit around all day,” Nelson says. “If the body is survival-based, it’s doing everything it can to ensure efficiency, and adding 10 more pounds of lean body mass drops the body’s efficiency.”
Genetics may largely set this upper limit, explains Abbie Smith-Ryan, Ph.D., C.S.C.S., director of the Applied Physiology Laboratory at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, who has extensively studied body composition. While some exercisers are “fast” or “extreme” responders, developing monthly almost freakishly quickly, others take way more time to make gains.
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For example, in one Journal of Applied Physiology study, when lifters spent 16 weeks (an eternity in muscle-science research) training their quadriceps, a quarter of them increased their quad size by 58 percent. Another quarter of the lifters made absolutely zero size gains, and the bulk of people increased quad mass by 32 percent. When study authors biopsied the exercisers’ quads, they found that the muscles’ relative number of specialized stem cells, called satellite cells, predicted how well their muscles would grow in response to training.
While you can’t control your genetics (yet), how you design both your strength training program and nutrition has a huge influence on whether you’ll max out your genetic potential, she says.
For example, while 3X10 sets have long been the go-to for muscle building, a recent meta-analysis in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research shows that as long as you train to fatigue—meaning that you cannot eek out one more rep—you will spur muscle growth regardless of your rep scheme. Increasing time under tension, maximizing range of motion, and gravitating toward compound over isolation exercises are other strategies for building the most overall muscle possible.
Maintaining a high level of protein intake is also critical. One 2018 review published in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition suggests that, for optimal muscle growth, people should consume between 0.4 and 0.55 grams of protein per kilogram of their body weight four times per day. So, if you weigh 180 pounds, that works out to four meals of 33 to 45 grams of protein each.
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Do all that, and you can expect to start to see some muscle growth in the mirror after three to four weeks.