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Safety, feasibility, and neuromuscular activity of acute low‐load resistance exercise with or without blood flow restriction in patients with severe hemophilia

Authors :
Joaquín Calatayud
Daniel C. Ogrezeanu
Juan J. Carrasco
Eduardo Martinez‐Valdes
Sofía Pérez‐Alenda
Carlos Cruz‐Montecinos
Lars L. Andersen
Per Aagaard
Luís Suso‐Martí
José Casaña
Source :
Calatayud, J, Ogrezeanu, D C, Carrasco, J J, Martinez-Valdes, E, Pérez-Alenda, S, Cruz-Montecinos, C, Andersen, L L, Aagaard, P, Suso-Martí, L & Casaña, J 2023, ' Safety, feasibility and neuromuscular activity of acute low-load resistance exercise with or without blood flow restriction in patients with severe Hemophilia ', European Journal of Haematology, vol. 111, no. 1, pp. 47-56 . https://doi.org/10.1111/ejh.13965
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Wiley, 2023.

Abstract

Objective: To compare the safety, feasibility, and neuromuscular activity of acute low-load resistance exercise with/without blood flow restriction (BFR) in people with severe hemophilia (PwH). Methods: Eight PwH under prophylaxis (5 with resistance training experience) performed 6 randomly ordered conditions of 3 intensity-matched knee extensions: no external load and no BFR, no external load and light BFR (20% of arterial occlusion pressure [AOP]), no external load and moderate BFR (40% AOP), external low load and no BFR, external low load with light BFR, and external low load with moderate BFR. Rated perceived exertion, pain, exercise tolerability, and adverse effects were assessed. Normalized root-mean-square (nRMS), nRMS spatial distribution, and muscle fiber-conduction velocity (MFCV) were determined using high-density surface electromyography for the vastus medialis and lateralis. Results: Exercises were tolerated, without pain increases or adverse events. Externally resisted conditions with/without BFR provided greater nRMS than nonexternally resisted conditions (p < 0.05). Spatial distribution and MFCV did not vary between conditions. Conclusions: In these patients, knee extensions with low external resistance and BFR at 20% or 40% AOP appear safe, feasible and do not cause acute/delayed pain. However, BFR during three consecutive repetitions does not increase nRMS nor changes nRMS spatial distribution or MFCV.

Details

ISSN :
16000609 and 09024441
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Haematology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c059d9f1e86066f2e08ec7576fdf155
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ejh.13965