Cardiac Autonomic Recovery After a Single Session of Resistance Exercise With and Without Vascular Occlusion

ABSTRACTOkuno, NM, Pedro, RE, Leicht, AS, de Paula Ramos, S, and Nakamura, FY. Cardiac autonomic recovery after a single session of resistance exercise with and without vascular occlusion. J Strength Cond Res 28(4)1143–1150, 2014—The aim of this study was to investigate the heart rate variability (H...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of strength and conditioning research 2014-04, Vol.28 (4), p.1143-1150
Hauptverfasser: Okuno, Nilo M, Pedro, Rafael E, Leicht, Anthony S, de Paula Ramos, Solange, Nakamura, Fábio Y
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container_end_page 1150
container_issue 4
container_start_page 1143
container_title Journal of strength and conditioning research
container_volume 28
creator Okuno, Nilo M
Pedro, Rafael E
Leicht, Anthony S
de Paula Ramos, Solange
Nakamura, Fábio Y
description ABSTRACTOkuno, NM, Pedro, RE, Leicht, AS, de Paula Ramos, S, and Nakamura, FY. Cardiac autonomic recovery after a single session of resistance exercise with and without vascular occlusion. J Strength Cond Res 28(4)1143–1150, 2014—The aim of this study was to investigate the heart rate variability (HRV) after resistance training with and without vascular occlusion. It was hypothesized that low intensity (LI) with vascular occlusion (LIO) would elicit comparable postexercise HRV responses with that of high intensity (HI) without vascular occlusion. Nine subjects undertook 4 experimental sessions of leg press exercise on different days(a) 1 repetition maximum (1RM) test, (b) 4 sets of 8 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 80% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (HI), (c) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 40% of 1RM with vascular occlusion (LIO), and (d) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set with the number of repetitions equal to the last set of LIO but at 40% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (LI). Heart rate variability was analyzed 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 5 hours, and 24 hours after the HI, LIO, and LI sessions. The HI session increased the heart rate (HR) and reduced the root mean square of the successive difference of R-R intervals (RMSSD) and log-transformed high-frequency (lnHF) power during prolonged recovery (HR = 5 hours; RMSSD = 30 minutes; lnHF = 1 hour) at a greater magnitude when compared with LIO and LI. Despite the same intensity of exercise for LIO and LI, the occlusion delayed the recovery of HR and HRV variables. Postexercise blood lactate concentration was moderate to strongly correlated with peak HR (r = 0.87), RMSSD (r = −0.64), and lnHF (r = −0.68). This study has demonstrated that LIO was able to reduce cardiac autonomic stress when compared with HI.
doi_str_mv 10.1519/JSC.0000000000000245
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Cardiac autonomic recovery after a single session of resistance exercise with and without vascular occlusion. J Strength Cond Res 28(4)1143–1150, 2014—The aim of this study was to investigate the heart rate variability (HRV) after resistance training with and without vascular occlusion. It was hypothesized that low intensity (LI) with vascular occlusion (LIO) would elicit comparable postexercise HRV responses with that of high intensity (HI) without vascular occlusion. Nine subjects undertook 4 experimental sessions of leg press exercise on different days(a) 1 repetition maximum (1RM) test, (b) 4 sets of 8 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 80% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (HI), (c) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 40% of 1RM with vascular occlusion (LIO), and (d) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set with the number of repetitions equal to the last set of LIO but at 40% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (LI). Heart rate variability was analyzed 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 5 hours, and 24 hours after the HI, LIO, and LI sessions. The HI session increased the heart rate (HR) and reduced the root mean square of the successive difference of R-R intervals (RMSSD) and log-transformed high-frequency (lnHF) power during prolonged recovery (HR = 5 hours; RMSSD = 30 minutes; lnHF = 1 hour) at a greater magnitude when compared with LIO and LI. Despite the same intensity of exercise for LIO and LI, the occlusion delayed the recovery of HR and HRV variables. Postexercise blood lactate concentration was moderate to strongly correlated with peak HR (r = 0.87), RMSSD (r = −0.64), and lnHF (r = −0.68). 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Cardiac autonomic recovery after a single session of resistance exercise with and without vascular occlusion. J Strength Cond Res 28(4)1143–1150, 2014—The aim of this study was to investigate the heart rate variability (HRV) after resistance training with and without vascular occlusion. It was hypothesized that low intensity (LI) with vascular occlusion (LIO) would elicit comparable postexercise HRV responses with that of high intensity (HI) without vascular occlusion. Nine subjects undertook 4 experimental sessions of leg press exercise on different days(a) 1 repetition maximum (1RM) test, (b) 4 sets of 8 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 80% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (HI), (c) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 40% of 1RM with vascular occlusion (LIO), and (d) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set with the number of repetitions equal to the last set of LIO but at 40% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (LI). 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Cardiac autonomic recovery after a single session of resistance exercise with and without vascular occlusion. J Strength Cond Res 28(4)1143–1150, 2014—The aim of this study was to investigate the heart rate variability (HRV) after resistance training with and without vascular occlusion. It was hypothesized that low intensity (LI) with vascular occlusion (LIO) would elicit comparable postexercise HRV responses with that of high intensity (HI) without vascular occlusion. Nine subjects undertook 4 experimental sessions of leg press exercise on different days(a) 1 repetition maximum (1RM) test, (b) 4 sets of 8 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 80% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (HI), (c) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set until exhaustion at 40% of 1RM with vascular occlusion (LIO), and (d) 4 sets of 16 repetitions + 1 set with the number of repetitions equal to the last set of LIO but at 40% of 1RM without vascular occlusion (LI). Heart rate variability was analyzed 10 minutes, 20 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 5 hours, and 24 hours after the HI, LIO, and LI sessions. The HI session increased the heart rate (HR) and reduced the root mean square of the successive difference of R-R intervals (RMSSD) and log-transformed high-frequency (lnHF) power during prolonged recovery (HR = 5 hours; RMSSD = 30 minutes; lnHF = 1 hour) at a greater magnitude when compared with LIO and LI. Despite the same intensity of exercise for LIO and LI, the occlusion delayed the recovery of HR and HRV variables. Postexercise blood lactate concentration was moderate to strongly correlated with peak HR (r = 0.87), RMSSD (r = −0.64), and lnHF (r = −0.68). This study has demonstrated that LIO was able to reduce cardiac autonomic stress when compared with HI.</abstract><cop>United States</cop><pub>Copyright by the National Strength &amp; Conditioning Association</pub><pmid>24077384</pmid><doi>10.1519/JSC.0000000000000245</doi><tpages>8</tpages><oa>free_for_read</oa></addata></record>
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subjects Adult
Analysis of Variance
Arterial Occlusive Diseases - physiopathology
Autonomic Nervous System - physiology
Cardiovascular system
Case-Control Studies
Exercise
Heart Rate
Humans
Lactic Acid - blood
Male
Physical Endurance - physiology
Recovery of Function
Reference Values
Resistance Training - methods
Sampling Studies
Stress, Mechanical
Task Performance and Analysis
Training
Variables
Vascular Resistance - physiology
Young Adult
title Cardiac Autonomic Recovery After a Single Session of Resistance Exercise With and Without Vascular Occlusion
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