It’s been a long time since the myth ‘cardio kills your gains’ was debunked from fitness professionals and the health space in general, but in the increased popularity of generalised fitness information on social media, fad workout plans and the popularity of getting as big as possible for younger guys, does the myth hold any truth? And is it time to revisit some previously closed cases of fitness myths?
How Does The Cardiovascular System Work?
Firstly, it’s important to understand how the cardiovascular system actually works, and how training it effectively can do a lot more for you than just running for longer. The cardiovascular system is made predominantly up of the heart, blood and blood vessels, this also includes your arteries, veins and capillaries. The obvious function of the cardiovascular system is to move oxygen, nutrients and hormones through the blood throughout your body, so when we think of the cardio system like that and the role it plays, is there anything more important than improving the rate that oxygen moves around your body?
Even remembering that in terms of progressing in the gym, the cardiovascular system plays an important role in the recovery of muscle tissue. By transporting fresh blood from the heart to the damaged muscles, and removing wastes to get transported to the kidneys, easier and more powerful blood flow is a no brainer.
What Is Hypertrophy?
Hypertrophy training primarily focuses on building size and density in the muscles. The main focus being in the development of muscle fibers in the process of breaking them down, and recovering bigger, and stronger. Hypertrophy training mostly involves lifting moderate weight with moderate reps. So knowing what we already do about how the cardiovascular system works, and now how hypertrophy training affects the muscles, does cardio affect the body’s ability to effectively build and maintain muscle mass?
Cardio Is Weight Training’s Best Friend
By consistently, smartly and effectively training both cardio and hypertrophy style training, you can not only build size and mass in the muscles, but you can also recover from that training even quicker with the help of moderate cardio. An example of light to moderate cardio day to day is a respectable step goal. For people that work at a desk or live a relatively sedentary lifestyle, it may be more difficult to get to classes or do cardio after weight training, this is why setting yourself a step goal that is both reasonable and challenging is a great way to know your effectively staying in a great cardio routine. Even the small amount of exertion walking puts on the body, over time can lead to some incredible results down the road.
Final Thoughts
Whatever the goal may be, from strength to muscle building, a moderate cardio routine is essential in improving your recovery, heart health and general fitness level. Doing such a routine could not only improve muscle growth but add to it. It of course all comes down to your fitness ability and goals, but if you're looking for a place to start, a brisk walk may lead to some serious gains.