Injured? Continue to exercise safely with unilateral training.
Use one-armed or legged exercises to train and grow muscle during injury recovery.
Unilateral exercises are one-legged or one-armed movements. The primary benefit of including unilateral exercises in your training programs is that the exerciser is using both sides of the body equally. Using both sides of the body equally helps to avoid overtraining, overusing the dominant side, helps to isolate and correct muscle imbalances, improves balance, utilizes core muscles, aids in injury prevention, and facilitates rehabilitation.
A key point that stands out about unilateral training versus bilateral training is how it facilitates rehabilitation. When you train one side of the body the other side is stimulated and positively impacted. Indirect stimulation of the non-working side of the body via working the opposite side of the body improves strength in the injured area. This is called cross-education of muscles. Cross-education is a neural event. The brain pathways that are used for the primary unilateral exercise stimulate the same muscles on the opposite side of the body. The key to applying cross-education is to recognize that the phenomenon works for the same muscles on the opposite side of the body only. For example, doing a one-legged knee extension with the right leg will stimulate the left quadriceps muscle as well. Cross-education is greatest for lower body muscles and when eccentric (lengthening) contractions are used to train the working muscles (Manca et. al. 2017). However, concentric (shortening) contractions work also, as do isometric (no change in length) contractions to a much lesser degree.
To utilize unilateral training during sessions try the suggested exercises and routines below.
Low-impact unilateral lower body exercises include:
- Side Lunge
- Front/forward step lunge
- Back/backward step lunge
- One-legged or “pistol” squat
- Box step up
Upper body unilateral exercises include:
- One-armed dumbbell shoulder presses or lateral raises
- One-armed rows or chest presses
- One-armed standing dumbbell rows
- One-armed triceps extensions and biceps curls
To advance unilateral training try adding plyometric exercises. Plyometric exercises vary in difficulty and can be used to progress unilateral training routines. Note that the exercises below are ranked by level of difficulty from low to high. Start out with low-intensity exercises and add medium to high-intensity as indicated below later in a program.
Unilateral lower body plyometric drills include:
- Single leg push-off (low)
- Lateral push-off (low)
- Lateral box jump (medium)
- Jump split squat (medium)
- Single leg vertical jump (high)
- Single leg tuck jump (high)
To include unilateral exercises in workouts try these sample routines using any combination of the exercises above.
Unilateral Lower Body Superset
Alternate sides of the body – superset one exercise like a forward lunge and alternate right and left legs. The same thing can be done with arm exercises alternating right and left sides of the body.
Exercise |
Repetitions |
Resistance |
Rest Between Sets |
Right Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Left Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Right Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Left Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Right Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Left Leg Lunge |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Note: rest periods should reflect the volume (repetitions) and intensity of exercise and be longer if the volume and/or intensity is high.
Combined Lower Body Unilateral and Bilateral Superset
Choose a unilateral exercise like a box step up and alternate it with a set of squats (bilateral exercise) in between the two sets of unilateral exercises. Note that bodyweight only is suggested for the box step up; however, external resistance like handheld dumbbells can be added for intermediate to advanced clients.
Exercise |
Reps |
Resistance |
Rest Between Sets |
Box Step Up |
10 - 15 |
Bodyweight* |
20 – 60 seconds |
Squat |
10 - 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Box Step Up |
10 - 15 |
Bodyweight* |
20 – 60 seconds |
Squat |
10 - 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Box Step Up |
10 - 15 |
Bodyweight* |
20 – 60 seconds |
Squat |
10 - 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
20 – 60 seconds |
Combined Upper Body Exercise and Plyometric Drill Circuit
For advanced programming and workouts, combine unilateral low-impact lower or upper body exercises with unilateral plyometric exercises. Repeat the circuit two to three times. Note that the suggested rest period includes zero – this is applicable where moving directly from one exercise to another is compatible with the client’s fitness level.
Exercise |
Reps |
Resistance |
Rest Between Sets |
Right arm standing dumbbell row |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
0 – 60 seconds |
Left arm standing dumbbell row |
10 – 15 |
65 – 85% of 1RM |
0 – 60 seconds |
Right Jump Split Squat |
10 – 15 |
Bodyweight |
0 – 60 seconds |
Left Jump Split Squat |
10 – 15 |
Bodyweight |
0 – 60 seconds |
Unilateral training is an effective and fun way to add variety to workouts while focusing on more serious issues like muscle imbalances and post-rehabilitation training.
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Reference
Manca A, Dragone D, Dvir Z, Deriu F. 2017. Cross-education of muscular strength following unilateral resistance training: a meta-analysis. European Journal of Applied Physiology. November. Volume 117 (11); 2335-2354.
Author Biography
Amy Ashmore, Ph.D. holds a doctorate in Kinesiology from the University of Texas at Austin. She is a physical therapy continuing education provider located in Las Vegas, NV.
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