1. The Impact of Different Ischemic Preconditioning Pressures on Pain Sensitivity and Resistance Exercise Performance.
- Author
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Ryo Kataoka, Jun Seob Song, Yujiro Yamada, Hammert, William B., Seffrin, Aldo, Spitz, Robert W., Wong, Vickie, Kang, Anna, and Loenneke, Jeremy P.
- Subjects
EXERCISE physiology ,PAIN measurement ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,RESISTANCE training ,ISCHEMIC preconditioning ,PAIN ,BLOOD flow restriction training ,REPERFUSION ,ENDURANCE sports training ,DATA analysis software ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,ERGOGENIC aids - Abstract
To determine (a) the impact of ischemic preconditioning pressures (applied as a % of arterial occlusion pressure [AOP]) on pressure pain threshold (PPT) and resistance exercise performance and (b) whether changes in performance could be explained by changes in PPT. Subjects (n539) completed 4 protocols in a randomized order: (a) ischemic preconditioning (IPC) at 110% AOP (IPC 110%), (b) IPC at 150% AOP (IPC 150%), (c) IPC at 10% AOP (Sham), and (d) time-matched control (CON). Each protocol included 4 cycles of 5 minutes of occlusion followed by 5 minutes of reperfusion. Pressure pain threshold was taken before and after. Discomfort ratings were given at the end of each cycle. Every visit finished with 2 sets of 75-second maximal isokinetic unilateral elbow flexion or extension. Overall, IPC 110% and IPC 150% resulted in similar increases in PPT relative to CON [110%: difference of 0.36 (0.18, 0.54) kg·m
-2 ; 150%: difference of 0.377 (0.15, 0.59) kg·m-2 ] and Sham. Both resulted in greater discomfort than Sham and CON, with IPC 150% inducing greater discomfort than IPC 110% (BF10 : 14.74). There were no differences between the conditions for total work (BF10 : 0.23), peak torque (BF10 : 0.035), or average power (BF10 : 0.159). We did not find evidence that PPT mediated performance. We did not detect changes in performance with 2 different relative pressures greater than AOP. Our mean applied pressures were lower than those used previously. There might be a minimal level of pressure (e.g., >150% of AOP) that is required to induce ergogenic effects of ischemic preconditioning. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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