UnBalanced
10-26-2009, 04:08 PM
Mark:
Thanks for PPST 2d ed. Obviously great book. Am looking forward to the Texas method when I finish out my linear progression.
Anyway, quick question re p. 70: the heart images. I understand that resistance training and endurance training cause different adaptations to cardiac muscle size and ventricle size/volume, but WHY is one superior to the other, from a cardiac health standpoint? I already agree that the pursuit of stength through barbell training is good and that long slow distance "cardio" as they say is bad, but my question is not about how to train - rather the effect of training on the heart. Obviosuly, a bigger, thicker, stronger heart is a good thing. So lift weights and get stronger. I get it. But it seems to me that a larger/wider/more voluminous ventricle is also a good thing, since it is that much bigger, can push more blood (i.e. it's a bigger bucket to bail out the boat), gets less clogged by whatever it is that clogs blood vessels, etc.
So, perhaps you (or perhaps Dr. Kilgore?) could explain which cardiac adaptation is superior for general cardiac health and why. Also, are they (the two different cardiac adaptations) mutually exclusive, or can metabolic conditioning work (whether through running, sprints, biking, tire pounding, tabata squats, whatever) combined with barbell trainign cause BOTH adaptations - perhaps the best of both possible worlds.
Thanks, again.
Thanks for PPST 2d ed. Obviously great book. Am looking forward to the Texas method when I finish out my linear progression.
Anyway, quick question re p. 70: the heart images. I understand that resistance training and endurance training cause different adaptations to cardiac muscle size and ventricle size/volume, but WHY is one superior to the other, from a cardiac health standpoint? I already agree that the pursuit of stength through barbell training is good and that long slow distance "cardio" as they say is bad, but my question is not about how to train - rather the effect of training on the heart. Obviosuly, a bigger, thicker, stronger heart is a good thing. So lift weights and get stronger. I get it. But it seems to me that a larger/wider/more voluminous ventricle is also a good thing, since it is that much bigger, can push more blood (i.e. it's a bigger bucket to bail out the boat), gets less clogged by whatever it is that clogs blood vessels, etc.
So, perhaps you (or perhaps Dr. Kilgore?) could explain which cardiac adaptation is superior for general cardiac health and why. Also, are they (the two different cardiac adaptations) mutually exclusive, or can metabolic conditioning work (whether through running, sprints, biking, tire pounding, tabata squats, whatever) combined with barbell trainign cause BOTH adaptations - perhaps the best of both possible worlds.
Thanks, again.