Low‐intensity swimming with blood flow restriction over 5 weeks increases VO2peak: A randomized controlled trial using Bayesian informative prior distribution

Author:

Held Steffen12ORCID,Rappelt Ludwig13,Deutsch Jan‐Philip1,Rein Robert4ORCID,Wiedenmann Tim1,Schiffer Anton1,Bieder Andreas5,Staub Ilka5,Donath Lars1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Intervention Research in Exercise Training German Sport University Cologne Cologne Germany

2. Department of Fitness and Health IST University of Applied Sciences Duesseldorf Germany

3. Department of Movement and Training Science University of Wuppertal Wuppertal Germany

4. Institute of Exercise Training and Sport Informatics German Sport University Cologne Germany

5. Institute of Professional Sport Education and Sport Qualifications German Sport University Cologne Germany

Abstract

ABSTRACTPeak oxygen uptake (VO2peak) and speed at first (LT1, minimal lactate equivalent) and second lactate threshold (LT2 = LT1 +1.5 mmol·L−1) are crucial swimming performance surrogates. The present randomized controlled study investigated the effects of blood flow restriction (BFR) during low‐intensity swimming (LiT) on VO2peak, LT1, and LT2. Eighteen male swimmers (22.7 ±3.0 yrs; 69.9 ±8.5 kg; 1.8 ±0.1 m) were either assigned to the BFR or control (noBFR) group. While BFR was applied during LiT, noBFR completed the identical LIT without BFR application. BFR of the upper limb was applied via customized pneumatic cuffs (75% of occlusion pressure: 135 ±10 mmHg; 8 cm cuff width). BFR training took place three times a week over 5 weeks (accumulated weekly net BFR training: 60 min·week−1; occlusion per session: 2‐times 10 min·session−1) and was used exclusively at low intensities. VO2peak, LT1, and LT2 diagnostics were employed. Bayesian credible intervals revealed notable VO2peak improvements by +0.29 L·min−1 kg−1 (95% credible interval: −0.26 to +0.85 L·min−1 kg−1) when comparing BFR vs. noBFR. Speed at LT1 −0.01 m·s−1 (−0.04 to +0.02 m·s−1) and LT2 −0.01 m·s−1 (−0.03 to +0.02 m·s−1) did not change meaningfully when BFR was employed. Fifteen sessions of LIT swimming (macrocycle of 5 h over 5 weeks) with a weekly volume of 60 min with BFR application adds additional impact on VO2peak improvement compared to noBFR LIT swimming. Occasional BFR applications should be considered as a promising means to improve relevant performance surrogates in trained swimmers.

Funder

German Federal Institute of Sports Science

Bundesinstitut für Sportwissenschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,General Medicine

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