please explain your question, it doesn't make sense...
it loses mass! and actually it gains weight because of its mucles Actually you only gain weight with muscle mass if you exercise, therefore increasing the muscle mass.
Muscles that aren't used regularly become weak. Eventually they will shrink and waste away. Sometimes muscles disappear from other causes. Muscle-wasting diseases (given the general name muscular dystrophy) cause muscles to die.
When you gain more muscle your body has to work harder to carry that weight when you run.but if you have strong legs you can get faster because you exert more force on the ground to push you forward
The difference between muscle mass and muscle hypertrophy is that muscle hypertrophy is the increase in size of skeletal muscle while muscle mass is the weight of your body muscle.
Men are quicker than women because men have more muscle.
Without consistent strength training, muscle size and strength decline with age. An inactive person loses 1/2 pound of muscle per year after age 20. After age 60, this rate of loss doubles. But, muscle loss is not inevitable. With regular strength training, muscle mass can be preserved throughout the lifespan, and the muscle lost can be rebuilt. Source: SparkPeople.com
an extra adjective that's not needed to describe muscle mass. Muscle mass is the amount of muscle in ones body as a % of their total weight.
It would have to be leg and muscle mass that is the answer on a+
yes
Yes, because as the size of your muscle increases, the mass of your muscle increases. And when the mass of your muscle increases, so does the weight.
Answer There's no such thing. Muscle is muscle. There are no "lean" muscles or "bulky"muscles. Some people have a greater muscle mass, some have less muscle mass- but that mass is muscle. A pound of muscle is going to require energy to stay around. If you have a greater muscle mass, you'll have a greater metabolism. He's right you know. This is really splitting hairs!
The condition is called muscle atrophy, which is the loss of muscle mass and strength leading to a decrease in muscle size.