Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.)

How Often Resistance Training Affects Muscle Strength Gains: A Review and Analysis

Updated

Abstract

A total of 22 studies demonstrated a significant effect (p = 0.003) of resistance training frequency on muscular strength gains.

  • Effect sizes for strength gains increased with training frequency: 0.74 for 1 time/week, 0.82 for 2 times/week, 0.93 for 3 times/week, and 1.08 for 4+ times/week.
  • No significant effect of training frequency on strength gains was observed when training volume was equated (p = 0.421).
  • Multi-joint exercises showed a significant effect of training frequency on strength results (p < 0.001), while single-joint exercises did not (p = 0.324).
  • Significant effects of training frequency were noted for upper body strength gains (p = 0.004), but not for lower body (p = 0.070).
  • Young adults exhibited a significant response to higher training frequencies (p = 0.024), whereas middle-aged and older adults did not (p = 0.093).
  • Women showed significant strength gains with increased training frequency (p = 0.030), while no significant effect was observed for men (p = 0.190).

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