You know that feeling.
You hit a bunch of reps on some bicep curls and then crank out some tricep extensions.
You can feel your arms swell and your veins pop. Your skin feels tight over your bulging muscles. Your t-shirt sleeves look like they might burst at the seams.
For a brief, glorious moment, you kinda look like Steve Rogers after he got the Super Soldier Serum.
You’ve just experienced a solid “pump.”
Arnold Schwarzenegger famously described the pump as “the greatest feeling you can get in a gym” and said the sensation was just as satisfying as sexual ecstasy.
I might not go that far in describing the pleasure of a good pump, but there’s no denying the psychological boost that comes from seeing instant visual evidence of your hard work.
A lot of gym bros love the look and feel of a pump so much that they’ll judge the success of a workout based solely on the pump it produced. They’ll then begin to “chase the pump” from workout to workout so they can feel like Steve Rogers several times a week.
But does chasing the pump actually build muscle, or is it just a fleeting moment of vanity that contributes nothing to long-term gains?
Let’s take a look at the research.
What Actually Happens During the Pump
The pump is a temporary swelling of the muscles that comes from lifting moderately heavy weight at high reps. The scientific name for the pump is “transient hypertrophy.”
While the pump is often associated with the biceps, you can get a pump in other muscles as well, including the chest, delts, and quads.
When performing multiple reps of an exercise like the dumbbell curl, the repeated muscle contractions compress your veins — the blood vessels responsible for carrying blood away from your muscles. At the same time, your arteries, which deliver oxygen-rich blood to your muscles, continue pumping in an increasing supply. Blood keeps flowing in while the outflow is restricted.
This imbalance creates a traffic jam within the muscle, leading to a buildup of blood. As pressure rises, plasma is forced out of the blood vessels and into the spaces between muscle fibers, creating the tight, swollen, glorious experience known as the pump.
The Fleeting Glory of Pumped Muscles
Remember the scientific name of the pump? Transient hypertrophy.
The pump might make you look jacked in the gym mirror, but its glory is temporary.
When you experience a pump, your actual muscle fibers aren’t growing bigger at that moment. Muscle growth comes while you’re recovering from your workout. It’s more like your muscles are water balloons that are being filled with extra fluid. Eventually, those fluid-filled muscle balloons shrink back to their normal size. Blood flow returns to normal, plasma gets reabsorbed, and your muscles revert to their regular size.
While you can have a degree of muscle swelling 48-72 hours after a workout (usually caused by inflammation in the muscles), the dramatic pump you see immediately after training fades within hours.
You’ve probably experienced this yourself. You crush an arm workout, get an amazing pump, and flex your biceps for your wife to show her your bicep vein. But by the time you’ve showered and gotten dressed again, the pump has disappeared.
The superhero has returned to his civilian identity. Bummer.
Does the Pump Help With Long-Term Muscle Growth?
While the pump is temporary, some bodybuilder bros argue that it does indeed contribute to actual long-term muscle growth.
A few studies have found a correlation between getting a pump and muscle growth.
A study that put previously untrained men through a six-week program involving leg extension exercises showed that those who experienced greater initial muscle swelling (pump) after their first session showed better hypertrophy gains by the end of the program.
Another study found a positive correlation between immediate post-workout pump in the lower leg muscles and long-term hypertrophy in those same muscles.
However, these studies don’t definitively prove that the pump directly causes muscle growth. The relationship could be correlational, or other factors might be at play.
It’s Mechanical Tension, Not the Pump
While we don’t know if the pump plays a role in long-term muscle building, we do know for sure what dynamic does: mechanical tension.
Mechanical tension refers to the stress placed on muscle fibers during resistance training. You achieve mechanical tension when you train a muscle close to failure. This adaptation process is what leads to real, lasting muscle growth.
While chasing the pump might feel good, the key to long-term muscle- and strength-building is choosing and consistently executing a training program that progressively overloads your muscles and causes mechanical tension in the muscle.
A Quick Upper-Body Pump Workout
That being said, there are times when training just to get a pump makes sense. Maybe you want to look jacked before a date or before a photoshoot.
If that’s the case, here’s a quick pump workout that’s aimed at maximizing blood flow and will get your upper body looking (temporarily) swole. You use light weight at high reps with minimal rest between sets for this; there’s no need to push yourself to failure.
- Push-ups: 3×15
- Chin-ups: 3×5
- Dumbbell bicep curls: 3×20
- Cable-rope tricep press-downs: 3×20
Again, keep the weight light. You shouldn’t feel sore and destroyed after this. You should just have a nice, solid pump.
Finding Balance in the Iron Game
The iron teaches us many lessons if we’re willing to learn; one is about balancing immediate gratification with long-term vision.
The pump feels great. It provides instant visual feedback and can be motivating when progress seems slow. There’s nothing wrong with appreciating those moments when your muscles are temporarily full and defined.
But true progress in the iron game comes from consistency, progressive overload, and smart training principles. It’s all about long obedience in the same direction. Let the pump be a byproduct of your training, not its purpose. But enjoy that pump when you get it!
This article was originally published on The Art of Manliness.
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