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Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation

BACKGROUND: One of the mechanisms responsible for enhancing muscular hypertrophy is the high metabolic stress associated with a reduced muscular oxygenation occurring during exercise, which can be achieved by reducing the speed of movement. Studies have tested that lowered muscle oxygenation artific...

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Autores principales: Formenti, Damiano, Perpetuini, David, Iodice, Pierpaolo, Cardone, Daniela, Michielon, Giovanni, Scurati, Raffaele, Alberti, Giampietro, Merla, Arcangelo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6173162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30310747
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5704
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author Formenti, Damiano
Perpetuini, David
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Cardone, Daniela
Michielon, Giovanni
Scurati, Raffaele
Alberti, Giampietro
Merla, Arcangelo
author_facet Formenti, Damiano
Perpetuini, David
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Cardone, Daniela
Michielon, Giovanni
Scurati, Raffaele
Alberti, Giampietro
Merla, Arcangelo
author_sort Formenti, Damiano
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: One of the mechanisms responsible for enhancing muscular hypertrophy is the high metabolic stress associated with a reduced muscular oxygenation occurring during exercise, which can be achieved by reducing the speed of movement. Studies have tested that lowered muscle oxygenation artificially induced by an inflatable cuff, could provoke changes in prefrontal cortex oxygenation, hence, to central fatigue. It was hypothesized that (1) exercising with a slow speed of movement would result in greater increase in cerebral and greater decrease in muscle oxygenation compared with exercises of faster speed and (2) the amount of oxygenation increase in the ipsilateral prefrontal cortex would be lower than the contralateral one. METHODS: An ISS Imagent frequency domain near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) system was used to quantify oxygenation changes in the vastus lateralis muscle and prefrontal cortex (contra- and ipsilateral) during unilateral resistance exercises with different speeds of movement to voluntary fatigue. After one maximal repetition (1RM) test, eight subjects performed three sets of unilateral knee extensions (∼50% of 1RM), separated by 2 min rest periods, following the pace of 1 s, 3 s and 5 s for both concentric and eccentric phases, in a random order, during separate sessions. The amount of change for NIRS parameters for muscle (ΔHb: deoxyhemoglobin, ΔHbO: oxyhemoglobin, ΔHbT: total hemoglobin, ΔStO(2): oxygen saturation) were quantified and compared between conditions and sets by two-way ANOVA RM. Differences in NIRS parameters between contra- and ipsilateral (lobe) prefrontal cortex and conditions were tested. RESULTS: Exercising with slow speed of movement was associated to larger muscle deoxygenation than normal speed of movement, as revealed by significant interaction (set × condition) for ΔHb (p = 0.01), and by significant main effects of condition for ΔHbO (p = 0.007) and ΔStO(2) (p = 0.016). With regards to the prefrontal cortex, contralateral lobe showed larger oxygenation increase than the ipsilateral one for ΔHb, ΔHbO, ΔHbT, ΔStO(2) in each set (main effect of lobe: p < 0.05). Main effects of condition were significant only in set1 for all the parameters, and significant interaction lobe × condition was found only for ΔHb in set1 (p < 0.05). DISCUSSION: These findings provided evidence that speed of movement influences the amount of muscle oxygenation. Since the lack of oxygen in muscle is associated to increased metabolic stress, manipulating the speed of movement may be useful in planning resistance-training programs. Moreover, consistent oxygenation increases in both right and left prefrontal lobes were found, suggesting a complementary interaction between the ipsi- and contralateral prefrontal cortex, which also seems related to fatigue.
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spelling pubmed-61731622018-10-11 Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation Formenti, Damiano Perpetuini, David Iodice, Pierpaolo Cardone, Daniela Michielon, Giovanni Scurati, Raffaele Alberti, Giampietro Merla, Arcangelo PeerJ Neuroscience BACKGROUND: One of the mechanisms responsible for enhancing muscular hypertrophy is the high metabolic stress associated with a reduced muscular oxygenation occurring during exercise, which can be achieved by reducing the speed of movement. Studies have tested that lowered muscle oxygenation artificially induced by an inflatable cuff, could provoke changes in prefrontal cortex oxygenation, hence, to central fatigue. It was hypothesized that (1) exercising with a slow speed of movement would result in greater increase in cerebral and greater decrease in muscle oxygenation compared with exercises of faster speed and (2) the amount of oxygenation increase in the ipsilateral prefrontal cortex would be lower than the contralateral one. METHODS: An ISS Imagent frequency domain near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) system was used to quantify oxygenation changes in the vastus lateralis muscle and prefrontal cortex (contra- and ipsilateral) during unilateral resistance exercises with different speeds of movement to voluntary fatigue. After one maximal repetition (1RM) test, eight subjects performed three sets of unilateral knee extensions (∼50% of 1RM), separated by 2 min rest periods, following the pace of 1 s, 3 s and 5 s for both concentric and eccentric phases, in a random order, during separate sessions. The amount of change for NIRS parameters for muscle (ΔHb: deoxyhemoglobin, ΔHbO: oxyhemoglobin, ΔHbT: total hemoglobin, ΔStO(2): oxygen saturation) were quantified and compared between conditions and sets by two-way ANOVA RM. Differences in NIRS parameters between contra- and ipsilateral (lobe) prefrontal cortex and conditions were tested. RESULTS: Exercising with slow speed of movement was associated to larger muscle deoxygenation than normal speed of movement, as revealed by significant interaction (set × condition) for ΔHb (p = 0.01), and by significant main effects of condition for ΔHbO (p = 0.007) and ΔStO(2) (p = 0.016). With regards to the prefrontal cortex, contralateral lobe showed larger oxygenation increase than the ipsilateral one for ΔHb, ΔHbO, ΔHbT, ΔStO(2) in each set (main effect of lobe: p < 0.05). Main effects of condition were significant only in set1 for all the parameters, and significant interaction lobe × condition was found only for ΔHb in set1 (p < 0.05). DISCUSSION: These findings provided evidence that speed of movement influences the amount of muscle oxygenation. Since the lack of oxygen in muscle is associated to increased metabolic stress, manipulating the speed of movement may be useful in planning resistance-training programs. Moreover, consistent oxygenation increases in both right and left prefrontal lobes were found, suggesting a complementary interaction between the ipsi- and contralateral prefrontal cortex, which also seems related to fatigue. PeerJ Inc. 2018-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC6173162/ /pubmed/30310747 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5704 Text en ©2018 Formenti et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Formenti, Damiano
Perpetuini, David
Iodice, Pierpaolo
Cardone, Daniela
Michielon, Giovanni
Scurati, Raffaele
Alberti, Giampietro
Merla, Arcangelo
Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title_full Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title_fullStr Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title_full_unstemmed Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title_short Effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
title_sort effects of knee extension with different speeds of movement on muscle and cerebral oxygenation
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6173162/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30310747
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5704
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