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Muscle performance

Whether you are a student who wants to be fitter, a netballer who wants a faster more powerful throw, a sprinter who wants to win that race, or a weightlifter who wants to lift heavier weights, you are trying to make your muscles work better.

There are three major factors that affect how well your muscles perform – strength, power and endurance.

Strength

Muscle strength is also a result of the combination of three factors:

  • Physiological strength, which depends on factors such as muscle size, the cross-sectional area of the muscle and responses to training.
  • Neurological strength, which looks at how weak or how strong the signal is which tells the muscle to contract.
  • Mechanical strength, which refers to a muscle’s pulling force and the way those forces can be changed using bones and joints as levers.

When we talk about the strength or muscles, we are describing the maximum force a muscle can exert. Muscle strength is directly dependant upon the size of the cross-sectional area of muscle, so if after a period of training, you increase your muscle size by 50 percent, you will also increase the force the muscle can develop by 50 percent.

For every one square centimetre of cross sectional area, muscle fibres can exert a maximum force of approximately 30 to 40 newtons (30 to 40 newtons is the weight of 3 to 4 kg.)

Example:

Emily can lift 21 kg (210 newtons force) using muscles that have a cross sectional area of 6 cm2. To work out how many newtons per square centimetre her muscles can pull with:

Force over area equals 210 over 6, equals 35 N over cm squared.

Emily’s friend Alisha has larger muscles that have a cross sectional area of 8 cm2. To work out what weight Alisha should be able to lift if her muscle tissue is similar to Emily’s:

Force equals force over area times area, equals 35 times 8, equals 280 N (28 kg weight)

Power

When muscles contract or stretch in moving a load they do work, and energy is transferred from one form to another. The power of muscles refers to how quickly the muscles can do this work and transfer the energy.

Example:

A weightlifter lifts 100 kg up a distance of 1.5 m, 100 kg has a weight force of 1000 newtons.

The work done (energy transferred) by the weightlifter is:

Work equals force times distance moved by force, equals 1000 times 1.5, equals 1500 joules of energy.

Now, if the weightlifter lifts the 100 kg explosively and takes only 0.5 seconds to make the lift, the power his/her muscles produce is:

Power equals work over time, equals 1500 over 0.5, equals 3000 joules per second, equals 3000 watts of power.

Where does the energy come from and where does it go?

The energy for muscle contraction comes from glucose transported by the blood and deposited in muscle tissues. In the weightlifter example, the energy has been transformed to gravitational potential energy. Also, heat energy will be generated in the muscle tissues themselves. This means that the muscles will have transferred even more energy than the amount calculated above.

Putting the relationships together

Power equals force times distance, divided by time.

measured in watts, W.

Distance divided by time equals velocity.

So the formula for power above can be rewritten as power = force x velocity

Sports scientists use this formula to measure the power profiles of particular sets of muscles by measuring both the force of the muscles and the speed with which they are contracting or lengthening. They have found that the greatest power is produced when the load is much less than the maximum load on the muscles.

Endurance

Muscle endurance refers to how well the muscles can exert and hold maximum force over and over and over again.

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