Thursday, November 1, 2007

EMS units are a great Holiday Gift!

EMS units are a great Holiday Gift!
You should realise that these units are nothing like the EMS systems you can buy on the shopping channels. The quality and more importantly, level of functionality is second to none. We have many personal trainers / coaches / physios who use these units on a daily basis to compliment their business practices. The biggest singular difference between these units and others is their ease of use. There is no need to tweek phase, frequency, intensity, duration etc. Just choose the programme and body part and go. Simple.

Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Electronic Muscle Stimulation As An Effective Workout

Electronic muscle stimulation is a technique that is widely used by elite athletes all over the world. It has been shown to be effective and successful toward toning and building muscle mass. This is why devices have been developed to accomplish this type of workout.

The way it works is fairly straight forward. The electrical impulses control the muscles via the motor nerves. Programming these impulses allows users to target their workouts for power, endurance, or resistance. Here, powerful contractions can be received without the pain of a traditional workout.

A microprocessor controls the work of the muscles, while adhering to the principles of traditional training physiology. Not only does electrical muscle stimulation help build muscles, but it also encompasses the toning and shaping that improves overall physical fitness. While it is not meant to take the place of a traditional workout, it can help supplement it and add to the benefits it can offer. It can also be a viable means of exercise for those who are unable to participate in the more traditional methods of exercise due to health problems or joint and muscle restrictions. It is advisable to consult a doctor before using an electronic muscle stimulation machine if this is the case.

Electronic muscle stimulation is effective for fitness training, as well as for muscle rehabilitation. It helps build endurance so that the muscles may be used for a longer period of time. The resistance it also provides, will assist in expanding the range of muscle movement and help to promote strength. The recovery process is also shortened by this method, as the patient is able to exercise in a non-restricted environment without too much strain or tension being place on the body.

This type of equipment has been successfully used in the physical therapy and sports medicine fields for many years, and has nothing to do with the various other pieces of exercise equipment that are commonly found on the market. As with any other workout, there are stages that must be accomplished in order to reap the full benefits of this type of program. Many machines also come with DVD-based training material that is designed to walk the user through the various steps involved in the process. Here, users will also be able to create an individualized training program that will best fit their individual needs. Before trying electronic muscle stimulation, it is advisable to check with a physician to make sure this is right for you.

Toneatronic has been in the business for 20 years as a reliable and major manufacturer and distributor of affordable high quality electronic muscle stimulator systems EMS and TENS unit for home use. http://www.toneatronic.com

Saturday, May 19, 2007

EMS FOR BODYBUILDING

EMS FOR BODYBUILDING
EMS is beneficial to bodybuilders who use it correctly. Since EMS may be able to stimulate muscle tissue which is not voluntarily stimulated, bodybuilders can use EMS soley or in conjunction with weights to supplement their regular training to fully exhaust muscles and to speed recuperation to enhance maximum growth.
EMS has been shown to help improve strength and muscle hypertrophy. It seems that slow-twitch, especially when pain tolerance is used to determine maximal power transmitted to a muscle gives the maximum benefit. However, low current settings utilized in a rythmic manner may be somewhat effective in stimulating slow-twitch muscle fibers.
As the scenario of Lee Haney using EMS in his quadriceps training suggests. EMS can be used to enhance recovery from bodybuilding training. Increased blood flow to the muscles helps to deliver nutrients necessary for recovery and subsequent growth while the pumping action (stimualtion/relaxation action of EMS training) helps to remove waste products, mainly lactic acid, from these muscles.
EMS will enable muscles to relax quicker and more completely. This in itself also serves to increase blood flow to and from the muscles. Several bodybuilders have reported muscle spasms following their workouts, especially in their calves and hamstrings. EMS is a very effective means of relieving these spasms.
Following very intense workouts, edema or fluid can occur. Such swelling inhibits recovery. The pumping action of EMS training can reduce edema and promote recovery in the manner described above.
EMS has also been shown to block pain signals referred to your brain. By stimulating alternate sensory mechanisms, EMS can reduce pain like the soreness we experience from intense bodybuilding.
As a result of heavy training, muscles can actually become scarred. Adhesions can appear, resulting in a loss of muscle elasticity and maximal force potential. EMS may help prevent such adhesions from occurring as well as possibly stretching old scar tissue.
If you should experience an immobilizing injury, as we all have at one time or another, EMS use can effectively reduce muscle atrophy and prevent large-scale losses in the enzymes responsible for energy production in both slow and fast-switch muscle fibers. In addition, regular EMS use during immobilization improves nerve-muscle interactions necessary for a speedy recovery.

Friday, April 13, 2007

Electrical Stimulation: The Early Experiments

Electrical Stimulation: The Early Experiments
Alex R Ward and Nataliya Shkuratova
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Electrical stimulation became popular to a large extent as a result of the activities of Kots, who claimed force gains of up to 40% in elite athletes as a result of what was then a new form of stimulation.
He did not provide details of his published work, nor did he give references. electrical stimulation became popular despite the lack of research in the English-language literature. No studies published in English examined whether the "10/50/10" treatment regimen (10 seconds of stimulation followed by 50 seconds rest, repeated for 10 minutes) advocated by Kots is optimal, and only one study addressed whether maximum muscle torque was produced at an alternating current frequency of 2.5 kHz. The few studies that compared low-frequency monophasic pulsed current and electrical stimulation are inconclusive. This article reviews and provides details of the original studies by Kots and co-workers. The authors contend that these studies laid the foundations for the use of forms of electrical stimulation in physical therapy. The authors conclude that there are data in the -language literature that support the use of electrical stimulation but that some questions remain unanswered. [Ward AR, Shkuratova N. electrical stimulation: the early experiments. Phys Ther. 2002;82:1019-1030.]
Key Words: Alternating current, Electrical stimulation, Kilohertz frequencies, Transcutaneous electrical stimulation.

Friday, April 6, 2007

EMS FOR BODYBUILDING

EMS FOR BODYBUILDING
EMS is beneficial to bodybuilders who use it correctly. Since EMS may be able to stimulate muscle tissue which is not voluntarily stimulated, bodybuilders can use EMS soley or in conjunction with weights to supplement their regular training to fully exhaust muscles and to speed recuperation to enhance maximum growth.
EMS has been shown to help improve strength and muscle hypertrophy. It seems that slow-twitch, especially when pain tolerance is used to determine maximal power transmitted to a muscle gives the maximum benefit. However, low current settings utilized in a rythmic manner may be somewhat effective in stimulating slow-twitch muscle fibers.
As the scenario of Lee Haney using EMS in his quadriceps training suggests. EMS can be used to enhance recovery from bodybuilding training. Increased blood flow to the muscles helps to deliver nutrients necessary for recovery and subsequent growth while the pumping action (stimualtion/relaxation action of EMS training) helps to remove waste products, mainly lactic acid, from these muscles.
EMS will enable muscles to relax quicker and more completely. This in itself also serves to increase blood flow to and from the muscles. Several bodybuilders have reported muscle spasms following their workouts, especially in their calves and hamstrings. EMS is a very effective means of relieving these spasms.
Following very intense workouts, edema or fluid can occur. Such swelling inhibits recovery. The pumping action of EMS training can reduce edema and promote recovery in the manner described above.
EMS has also been shown to block pain signals referred to your brain. By stimulating alternate sensory mechanisms, EMS can reduce pain like the soreness we experience from intense bodybuilding.

Sunday, December 3, 2006

Maximize Your Workout With Electronic Muscle Stimulation

Maximize Your Workout With Electronic Muscle Stimulation
by John Comerski (A member of the American College of Sports Medicine and the Weider Group)

It's 7:00 a.m. and Lee Haney heads for the gym to bomb his legs. On his way home Lee's quadriceps feel like they're ready to burst. But an hour later, his legs are feeling more relaxed and Lee knows that his quadriceps muscles are now in a critical rebuilding phase. Blood flow, temperature and metabolism are still elevated, and the uptake of nutrients by these thoroughly worked muscles is about at its peak. Lee knows it's time to hook up the electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) on both legs. He places electrodes on his vastus medialis (inside quad). Turning on his electrical unit Lee carefully increases the current to these muscles to a level as high as is comfortable. Pulses of current are then sent to Lee's quadriceps: the muscles contract for a moment, then relax, contract, relax... Twenty minutes later - after perhaps 1,200 to 1,500 split-second contractions and relaxations - Lee's supplemental quadriceps workout is over.This entire process is repeated every time Lee trains as he prepares for the Mr. Olympia contest. The EMS, he thinks, just might give him the edge he needs to get bigger, harder and denser.
ORIGINS OF EMS
EMS has been around for some time but was really brought to light after the 1972 Olympics when the USSR swept up a basketful of gold and silver medals. EMS was reportedly used on Soviet athletes with benefits reflected in the medal harvest. Since then, numerous research studies have been performed using EMS. Bruce Lee used EMS extensively to increase speed and hardness. John Cardillo of Ontario Canada used EMS to create mind-blowing cuts and size.Increases in strength, muscle size and athletic performance have all been attributed to this technology. Even claims of improved cardio-respiratory efficiency and reduced body fat levels have been made.
STIMULATING MUSCLE GROWTH & STRENGTH
As you know, muscles need stimulation to become stronger and larger. In any bodybuilding program, you must always attempt to better your past performances, whether it be in number of reps, sets or weight. Regardless, it all comes back to progressive overload of your muscles.
A host of various physiological changes occurs through bodybuilding and the changes are very specific to the type of training you are performing. For instance, if you workout with heavy poundage and low repetitions, you can improve your strength, power and muscle size. On the other hand, lighter weights, higher reps and shorter rest periods are used to develop Muscular definition and endurance. However, the increased nerve-muscle activity is the primary stimulus needed for muscles to enlarge, become stronger and have more endurance.
A major topic of researchers as well as athletes has been whether electrical muscle stimulations could play a significant part in training. The consensus, although guarded, is that if utilized correctly and consistently, EMS can be extremely beneficial...
THE BASIS OF EMS
When you perform any exercise, your brain sends a message down the spinal cord through the nerves innervating all the muscles you're using that causes them to contract. This is referred to as voluntary muscle action. In essence, your brain controls the muscle.
The idea behind electrical muscle stimulation is that an outside electrical source stimulates the nerves to send these signals to your muscle to contract. This is accomplished by passing electrical current through electrode pads placed over a muscle. The current passes through your skin to the nerves in the immediate area, stimulating the connecting muscles to contract.
EMS CLAIMS
Studies have shown that EMS stimulates large nerve axons (long outgrowths of a nerve cell body), some of which you cannot stimulate voluntarily. It is possible that EMS might allow for additional muscle hypertrophy (i.e., increased development of tissue by enlargement, without multiplication of cells).
EMS manufacturers claim substantial increases of muscle hypertrophy (growth), strength and endurance. EMS may be used solely to do this or in conjunction with regular weight training by aiding recovery and thus helping muscles grow and get stronger. EMS also increases your heart rate, body temperature and metabolism - thus promoting energy and fat absorption from your body.
EMS FOR BODYBUILDING
EMS is beneficial to bodybuilders who use it correctly. Since EMS may be able to stimulate muscle tissue which is not voluntarily stimulated, bodybuilders can use EMS solely or in conjunction with weights to supplement their regular training to fully exhaust muscles and to speed recuperation to enhance maximum growth.
EMS has been shown to help improve strength and muscle hypertrophy. It seems that slow-twitch, especially when pain tolerance is used to determine maximal power transmitted to a muscle gives the maximum benefit. However, low current settings utilized in a rhythmic manner may be somewhat effective in stimulating slow-twitch muscle fibers.
As the scenario of Lee Haney using EMS in his quadriceps training suggests. EMS can be used to enhance recovery from bodybuilding training. Increased blood flow to the muscles helps to deliver nutrients necessary for recovery and subsequent growth while the pumping action (stimulation/relaxation action of EMS training) helps to remove waste products, mainly lactic acid, from these muscles.
EMS will enable muscles to relax quicker and more completely. This in itself also serves to increase blood flow to and from the muscles. Several bodybuilders have reported muscle spasms following their workouts, especially in their calves and hamstrings. EMS is a very effective means of relieving these spasms.
Following very intense workouts, edema or fluid can occur. Such swelling inhibits recovery. The pumping action of EMS training can reduce edema and promote recovery in the manner described above.
EMS has also been shown to block pain signals referred to your brain. By stimulating alternate sensory mechanisms, EMS can reduce pain like the soreness we experience from intense bodybuilding.
As a result of heavy training, muscles can actually become scarred. Adhesions can appear, resulting in a loss of muscle elasticity and maximal force potential. EMS may help prevent such adhesions from occurring as well as possibly stretching old scar tissue.If you should experience an immobilizing injury, as we all have at one time or another, EMS use can effectively reduce muscle atrophy and prevent large-scale losses in the enzymes responsible for energy production in both slow and fast-switch muscle fibers. In addition, regular EMS use during immobilization improves nerve-muscle interactions necessary for a speedy recovery.
As you can see, EMS use is a variable tool in bodybuilding training and has a positive influence on muscle strength and muscle growth
Thank you
Allan Fine /Lifecoach/ Nutritionist / C.P.T.Tone-A-Tronic EMS units
toneatronic@shaw.ca
Phone: 403-246-7386
1-866-308-0606Mountain Standard Time
http://www.toneatronic.com
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Tuesday, November 28, 2006

Tens Units Blog

Ask any questions on Tens units you need to know the answers too.
Thank youAllan Fine /Lifecoach/ Nutritionist / C.P.T.Tone-A-Tronic EMS units

mailto:toneatronic@shaw.ca
Phone: 403-246-7386
1-866-308-0606
Mountain Standard Time
http://www.toneatronic.com/