Skip to content
ScienceBlog.com
  • Featured Blogs
    • EU Horizon Blog
    • ESA Tracker
    • Experimental Frontiers
    • Josh Mitteldorf’s Aging Matters
    • Dr. Lu Zhang’s Gondwanaland
    • NeuroEdge
    • NIAAA
    • SciChi
    • The Poetry of Science
    • Wild Science
  • Topics
    • Brain & Behavior
    • Earth, Energy & Environment
    • Health
    • Life & Non-humans
    • Physics & Mathematics
    • Social Sciences
    • Space
    • Technology
  • Our Substack
  • Follow Us!
    • Bluesky
    • Threads
    • FaceBook
    • Google News
    • Twitter/X
  • Contribute/Contact

muscle mass

Zahra Fatahimeiabadi, a graduate student in the lab of Sudip Bajpeyi, Ph.D., a professor in the Department of Kinesiology at The University of Texas at El Paso (not pictured), demonstrates a resistance workout while using neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES). Bajpeyi leads a team of researchers whose new meta-analysis study, published this month in the European Journal of Applied Physiology, found that combining NMES with resistance training leads to greater muscle mass and strength compared to resistance training alone.

Adding Electrical Stimulation to Workouts Boosts Muscle Gains, Study Shows

skinny fat man

Weight re-gained after weight loss results in less muscle, more fat

Substack subscription form sign up

Comments

  • Sue Ann Hayes on Hidden Nuclear Protein Fuels Pancreatic Cancer’s Deadly Aggression
  • Curtis Webber on The GPS-Killer? This Quantum Device ‘Feels’ Motion Like a Brain—Down to the Atomic Level
  • Ran on How the Age You First Had Sex Could Shape How You Age Decades Later
  • Sparty on How the Age You First Had Sex Could Shape How You Age Decades Later
  • Josh Mitteldorf on A Single TV Segment Sent Leucovorin Prescriptions for Autistic Children Soaring 2,000 Percent
© 2026 ScienceBlog.com | Follow our RSS / XML feed