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The 6 Principles of Muscle Growth

May 13, 2024



Starting the journey towards muscle growth can often feel daunting, but understanding the science behind the process can serve as the light that guides you to reach your goals.  But, if you just focus on completing 3 sets of 10 reps on a variety of exercises, the odds are you won’t have much muscle to show for all your hours in the gym. Let’s unravel the science and technique behind each principle to ensure your sweat and determination yield the best possible results.

 

Muscle growth requires checking several boxes — with both nutrition and training — to help your body break down muscle tissue and build it back. It’s the main reason most people don’t see dramatic changes. They do some of the work, but not all of it.  By learning these six principles for muscle growth and incorporating them into your workouts, you can optimize your efforts at the gym and pave the way toward maximum muscle growth.

 

Principle #1: Muscle Growth Requires Calories

 

Principle #2: Optimize For Protein

 

Principle #3: Train Each Muscle at least 2-3 Times per Week

 

Principle #4: Focus on the Full Range of Motion (And check your ego)

 

Principle #5: Prioritize Full-Body Exercises 

 

Principle #6: Challenge Your Muscles, Don’t Crush Them

 

Principle #1: Muscle Growth Requires Calories

The quest for more muscle starts with nutrition. Your first step is getting your calorie intake in order.   Gaining muscle fast requires being in a calorie surplus (eating more calories than you burn). This means eating is a priority, but you don’t need to go overboard. You can only gain muscle so fast, and a modest calorie surplus works just as well as “eating everything in sight” and leaves you with a lot less fat to lose later.  

 

A side note: The saying “lifting weights makes you bulky” is more myth than reality. If you’re not eating in a way to add size, you’re not going to add size. You’ll become stronger. You will add definition. But, the amount of muscle you can gain is directly influenced by how much you eat. 

 

Even with a conservative bump in how much you eat, you’ll still gain some fat with the muscle, and it’s important to be prepared for that reality.  So, how do you determine the caloric “sweet spot” where you maximize muscle and minimize fat gain? To start, you need to figure out your average daily calorie intake, or maintenance calories. Tracking your eating with an app makes this much easier, though a basic notebook works too. Here’s a basic formula you can use to determine your baseline calories.

The formula: If you perform 1 hour or less of exercise a week, multiply your target body weight by 10. That’s how many calories you should consume daily. 

However, if you work out more than that, add 1 to the multiplier for every additional hour you train. So, if your target body weight is 180 pounds and you exercise for 3 hours a week, you’d multiply 180 by 12—giving you a target of 2,160 calories a day. You can divide those calories into however many meals you want—three, four, five, or six—to help you hit your goal. Once you know your maintenance calories, it’s just a matter of adding the right amount of extra calories to get your body weight to increase gradually. An extra 500 calories a day is a good starting point, but the real question is if you’re gaining weight. If you want to minimize fat gain, a good rule of thumb is to keep weight gain around 2 pounds per month. If you’re a complete beginner, that amount can be more than twice as much. 

Why 2 pounds a month? Considering muscle gain is a slow process, any more than that and you’re probably adding too much fat. However, if you go any slower, you won’t be gaining muscle as fast as you could be either.  If you find that you have gained 3 pounds in a week, cut your calorie intake by about around 200-300 calories per day.  On the other hand, if the scale says you’re barely gaining at all, then increase your calorie intake by 200- 300 calories per day and continue to track your progress. The calorie game plan is simple: assess, adjust, and repeat.

 

 

 

Principle #2: Optimize For Protein

On top of dialing in your calorie intake, you need to make sure you’re eating enough protein. Research suggests that the perfect range for building muscle is anywhere from 0.8- to 1 gram of protein per kilogram of body weight, but this number can go to 1.2 to 2.0 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. To get your body weight in kilograms, simply divide your body weight in pounds by 2.2.

That’s most of the dietary battle. If you’re consistently hitting your calorie and protein goals, then you’ve got your nutritional bases covered for gaining muscle.

Whether you’re building muscle or losing fat, it is important to think about eating for the body you want, not the body you have. 

But, there’s an exception. Remember how we said you don’t want to be gaining weight too fast? Let’s say you’re 140 pounds and you want to weigh 180. A 40-pound jump is a lot of weight. 

Eating that many more calories and pumping up your protein would be a massive shock to your system that would likely lead to more fat gain and be a world of hurt for your digestive system. 

It’s good to know your big-picture goal — but it’s more important to break that bigger goal into smaller steps that will ensure constant progress. Many people force their way into plateaus during a muscle growth phase simply because they don’t create more realistic checkpoints along the process. 

Instead of going all in, break your goals into 10-pound increments. That means, for the example above, you’d first try to eat for a 150-pound body. Once you hit 150, then you’d adjust your calories and protein for a 160-pound body. Each step you hit will also allow your body to readjust its set point. 

As you probably know, your body tends to gravitate to a certain weight. When you gain or lose, you want to make it easier for your body to adjust, and this process can help make that a reality so that it doesn’t feel like a constant battle to stay at your new weight. 

 

 

 

Principle #3: Train Each Muscle at least 2-3 Times Per Week

You can gain muscle by only hitting each muscle once per week, or by working each muscle even more frequently. But, if you’re trying to maximize muscle gain, 2-3 times per week seems to be your best bet.

The cellular processes of building muscle (muscle protein synthesis) are only working away at high speed for about 24-48 hours after you finish a workout. 

So, if you only train a muscle once per week, your muscles are only spending about 1/7-2/7 of their time in “growth mode.” 

Training a muscle more frequently can work, but your margin for error gets smaller, and you run a greater risk of overuse injuries or suboptimal recovery. 

Remember, more isn’t always more with muscle gain. If all it took to gain muscle was tons of reps, there would be a lot of people walking around with massive muscles. 

The right amount of reps, the best exercise, a locked-in diet, and optimized recovery is essential. When you lift weight, the muscle fibers tear and break down. 

And then your muscles grow during the recovery phase. 

 

 

 

Principle #4: Focus on the Full Range of Motion 

Working a muscle through a full range of motion builds the most muscle and strength. When muscles are slightly stretched under load, more muscle damage occurs, and local concentrations of muscle-building hormones increase much more than they do with shorter ranges of motion. 
Lifting through a full range of motion may also help with injury prevention. Your muscles add more contractile units in series, meaning your muscles can stretch farther without the risk of tearing. 

Your nervous system also learns how to control your muscles and joints through greater degrees of joint flexion, where most injuries occur if you don’t have enough control.

Mastering a full range of motion usually means you’ll need to lower the weight you’re using — sometimes significantly. It can feel like a step back, but you’re playing the long game. 

The lighter, full-range reps will still have benefits. And, as you add more strength, that one step back will turn into 10 steps forward with muscle growth. 

 

 

 

Principle #5: Prioritize Full-Body Exercises 

You shouldn’t build a workout around 14 different biceps exercises.
You add muscle when you prioritize multi-joint lifts that focus on your entire body. Here’s how to make sure you’re picking the right movements.

Select 2-3 exercises from each of the following 6 categories, and do each of those exercises once per week:

Knee-dominant: Back squats, front squats, leg press, hack squat, single-leg squat variations (like Bulgarian split squats)

Hip-dominant: Deadlifts, Romanian deadlifts, good mornings

Horizontal pulling: Barbell rows, dumbbell rows, t-bar rows, chest-supported rows

Vertical pulling: Pull-ups, chin-ups, pulldowns, reverse grip pulldowns

Chest-dominant pressing: Bench press, incline press, dumbbell bench press, dumbbell incline press, dips

Shoulder-dominant exercises: Military press, dumbbell overhead press, upright row, high pull, push press

Those “big” exercises should form the core of your workouts. Once you’ve done 3-5 hard sets for the big lifts of the day, then you can spend some time doing accessory work, whether it’s curls, pec flys, lunges, or core exercises.

Make sure you track (or write down) your workouts and try to beat your numbers each week. 

This can be done in a few different ways. You can use the same weights and perform more reps, do the same weights and reps and add an extra set, or try to add weight to the bar. When your performance improves, as long as you’re not cheating your reps, you will gain muscle.

 

 

 

Principle #6: Challenge Your Muscles, Don’t Crush Them

There’s no magic rep-range to maximize muscle growth. That’s a good thing because it means you can train with lower and higher reps and still see results. 
In general, the best approach might be using loads that let you get anywhere between 8 to 15 reps per set with good form.

You can gain muscle with fewer reps per set, but that can mean using loads that can beat up your joints. And, you need to make sure you’re doing enough sets to reach a volume that maximizes muscle growth.  

You can also gain muscle with more reps per set, but, generally, those sets are going to be so exhausting (especially for lower body exercises like squats and deadlifts) that you’ll be gassed after the first couple of sets, which can tank the rest of your workout. 

Or, you might find that other limitations — such as grip strength or cardio endurance — give out before your muscles do. Either way, you might be exhausted, but that doesn’t mean your muscles were challenged in a way that will keep you building muscle. 

If you’re focusing on anywhere from8 to 15 reps, push every set to the point just before your form breaks down (this is known as technical failure).

It sounds funny, but your muscles are lazy. They use the bare minimum amount of muscle fibers necessary to produce the required amount of force to move an object. If you can understand this concept, you can learn a key ingredient of maximizing muscle growth.

The last muscle fibers activated are also the ones most capable of growth, but your body won’t use those fibers unless it absolutely needs to.

By putting as much effort as you can into each set, and only stopping a set when you know you can’t get another rep with good form, you use more of your muscle fibers, including those that influence growth the most.

Muscle growth takes time, but, now you know what to do, and it’s up to you to put in the work and — most importantly — stay consistent. 

If you’re looking for advice on how to be more active safely, please reach out to KB Fitness Solutions. Our team of certified fitness professionals will be glad to help you achieve what you are meant to achieve!

The Author


Carlo Varquez, M.S.

I believe in the practice of preventative health. The only way to combat chronic diseases is through preventative action such as exercise and diet. My health and wellness career started within myself. After being an active person in high school through sports, my fitness dropped entering college. I gained unhealthy habits that lead to weight gain. To prevent any complications, I made some time to be active again by picking up weight lifting. Through that, I found myself wanting to help others before it was too late for them. As I gained my masters degree, I interned at the Cardiac Rehabilitation department at Advocate Lutheran General. I saw firsthand what cardiovascular disease can do, and what the action plan is to help those people return back to their daily routine. The time to make change is now, but it doesn’t need to be done alone. The science behind exercise is a powerful tool that is often overlooked. I want to motivate and increase self-efficacy to help others achieve their goals.

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