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Corticomotor excitability is increased following an acute bout of blood flow restriction resistance exercise
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نویسنده
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brandner c.r. ,warmington s.a. ,kidgell d.j.
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منبع
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frontiers in human neuroscience - 2015 - دوره : 9 - شماره : DEC
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چکیده
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We used transcranial magnetic stimulation (tms) to investigate whether an acute bout of resistance exercise with blood flow restriction (bfr) stimulated changes in corticomotor excitability (motor evoked potential,mep) and short-interval intracortical inhibition (sici),and compared the responses to two traditional resistance exercise methods. ten males completed four unilateral elbow flexion exercise trials in a balanced,randomized crossover design: (1) heavy-load (hl: 80% one-repetition maximum [1-rm]); (2) light-load (ll; 20% 1-rm) and two other light-load trials with bfr applied; (3) continuously at 80% resting systolic blood pressure (bfr-c); or (4) intermittently at 130% resting systolic blood pressure (bfr-i). mep amplitude and sici were measured using tms at baseline,and at four time-points over a 60 min post-exercise period. mep amplitude increased rapidly (within 5 min post-exercise) for bfr-c and remained elevated for 60 min post-exercise compared with all other trials. mep amplitudes increased for up to 20 and 40 min for ll and bfr-i,respectively. these findings provide evidence that bfr resistance exercise can modulate corticomotor excitability,possibly due to altered sensory feedback via group iii and iv afferents. this response may be an acute indication of neuromuscular adaptations that underpin changes in muscle strength following a bfr resistance training programme. © 2015 brandner,warmington and kidgell.
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کلیدواژه
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Intracortical inhibition; Kaatsu; Motor cortex plasticity; Strength training; Transcranial magnetic stimulation; Vascular occlusion
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آدرس
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centre for physical activity and nutrition research,school of exercise and nutrition sciences,deakin university,melbourne,vic,australia,talent identification unit,sport science department,aspire academy,doha, Qatar, centre for physical activity and nutrition research,school of exercise and nutrition sciences,deakin university,melbourne,vic, Australia, department of rehabilitation,nutrition and sport,school of allied health,la trobe university,melbourne,vic, Australia
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Authors
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