Acute effects of partial-body cryotherapy on isometric strength: maximum handgrip strength evaluation

ABSTRACTThe aim of the study was to evaluate the influence of a single partial-body cryotherapy (PBC) session on the maximum handgrip strength (JAMAR Hydraulic Hand dynamometer). Two hundred healthy adults were randomized into a PBC group and a control group (50 males and 50 females in each group)....

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of strength and conditioning research 2017-12, Vol.31 (12), p.3497-3502
Hauptverfasser: De Nardi, M, Pizzigalli, L, Benis, R, Caffaro, F, Cremasco, M Micheletti
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container_end_page 3502
container_issue 12
container_start_page 3497
container_title Journal of strength and conditioning research
container_volume 31
creator De Nardi, M
Pizzigalli, L
Benis, R
Caffaro, F
Cremasco, M Micheletti
description ABSTRACTThe aim of the study was to evaluate the influence of a single partial-body cryotherapy (PBC) session on the maximum handgrip strength (JAMAR Hydraulic Hand dynamometer). Two hundred healthy adults were randomized into a PBC group and a control group (50 males and 50 females in each group). After the initial handgrip strength test (T0), the experimental group performed a 150 seconds session of PBC (temperature range between -130 and -160 °C), whilst the control group stayed in a thermo neutral room (22.0 ± 0.5 °C). Immediately after, both groups performed another handgrip strength test (T1). Data underlined that both groups showed an increase in handgrip strength values, especially the experimental group (ControlT0=39.48 kg, T1=40.01 kg; PBCT0=39.61 kg, T1=41.34 kg). The analysis reported also a statistical effect related to gender (F=491.99, P
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subjects Acute effects
Adult
Adults
Cryotherapy
Cryotherapy - methods
Female
Hand Strength - physiology
Humans
Isometric exercise
Male
Middle Aged
Muscle contraction
Muscle strength
Strength training
title Acute effects of partial-body cryotherapy on isometric strength: maximum handgrip strength evaluation
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