Authors
Robert W Spitz, Ryo Kataoka, Scott J Dankel, Zachary W Bell, Jun Seob Song, Vickie Wong, Yujiro Yamada, Jeremy P Loenneke
Publication date
2023/3
Source
Sports Medicine
Volume
53
Issue
3
Pages
637-648
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Description
Background
Isotonic exercise is the most common mode of strength training. Isotonic strength is often measured in the movement that was exercised, but isometric and isokinetic movements are also commonly used to quantify changes in muscular strength. Previous research suggests that increasing strength in one movement may not lead to an increase in strength in a different movement. Quantifying the increase in strength in a movement not trained may be important for understanding strength training adaptations and making recommendations for resistance exercise and rehabilitation programs.
Objective
To quantify changes in non-specific strength relative to a control.
Design
A systematic review and random effects meta-analysis was conducted investigating the effects of isotonic strength training on isotonic and isokinetic/isometric strength.
Search and Inclusion
This systematic review was conducted in Google …
Total citations
Scholar articles
RW Spitz, R Kataoka, SJ Dankel, ZW Bell, JS Song… - Sports Medicine, 2023