Muscle memory (strength training)
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Muscle memory in strength training and weight-lifting is the effect that trained athletes experience of a rapid return of muscle mass and strength after long periods of inactivity.[1]
The mechanisms implied for the muscle memory suggest that it is mainly related to strength training, and a 2016 study conducted at Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden failed to find a memory effect of endurance training.[2]
Until recently such effects were attributed solely to muscle memory in motor learning occurring in the central nervous system. Long-term effects of previous training on the muscle fibers themselves, however, have recently also been observed related to strength training.[3]
Until recently it was generally assumed that the effects of exercise on muscle was reversible, and that after a long period of de-training the muscle fibers returned to their previous state. For strength training this view was challenged in 2010 by using in vivo imaging techniques revealing specific long lasting structural changes in muscle fibers after a strength-training episode.[3]
Implications
The notion of a memory mechanism residing in muscle fibers might have implications for health related exercise advice, and for exclusion times after doping offences.[citation needed]