Authors
Vickie Wong, Robert W Spitz, Jun Seob Song, Yujiro Yamada, Ryo Kataoka, William B Hammert, Anna Kang, Aldo Seffrin, Zachary W Bell, Jeremy P Loenneke
Publication date
2024/5
Journal
European Journal of Applied Physiology
Volume
124
Issue
5
Pages
1575-1585
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Description
Introduction
The application of blood flow restriction (BFR) to low-intensity exercise may be able to increase strength not only in the trained limb but also in the homologous untrained limb. Whether this effect is repeatable and how that change compares to that observed with higher intensity exercise is unknown.
Purpose
Examine whether low-intensity training with BFR enhances the cross-education of strength compared to exercise without BFR and maximal efforts.
Methods
A total of 179 participants completed the 6-week study, with 135 individuals performing isometric handgrip training over 18 sessions. Participants were randomly assigned to one of four groups: 1) low-intensity (4 × 2 min of 30% MVC; LI, n = 47), 2) low-intensity with blood flow restriction (LI + 50% arterial occlusion pressure; LI-BFR, n = 41), 3) maximal effort (4 × 5 s of 100% MVC; MAX, n = 47), and 4) non-exercise control (CON, n …
Total citations
Scholar articles
V Wong, RW Spitz, JS Song, Y Yamada, R Kataoka… - European Journal of Applied Physiology, 2024