mechanistic
Analysis v1
Strong Support

When you do resistance training, different parts of the same muscle group don't grow at the same rate. For example, the outer calf muscle tends to get bigger faster than the inner calf and deeper calf muscles, which suggests that how muscles are naturally built and activated matters more for growth than the exact workout routine you follow.

41
Pro
0
Against

Evidence from Studies

Supporting (1)

41

Community contributions welcome

After eight weeks of leg exercises, the outer calf muscle grew more than the inner calf and deep calf muscles, regardless of whether heavy or light weights were used. This shows that where a muscle is located matters more for its growth than how heavy the weights are.

Contradicting (0)

0

Community contributions welcome

No contradicting evidence found

Gold Standard Evidence Needed

According to GRADE and EBM methodology, here is what ideal scientific evidence would look like to definitively prove or disprove this specific claim, ordered from strongest to weakest evidence.