Resistance exercise acutely elevates dynamic cerebral autoregulation gain

Author:

Smail Oliver J.1,Clarke Daniel J.1,Al‐Alem Qais1,Wallis William1,Barker Alan R.12,Smirl Jonathan D.34567ORCID,Bond Bert12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Exeter Head Impacts, Brain Injury and Trauma (ExHIBIT), Public Health and Sport Sciences University of Exeter Exeter UK

2. Children's Health and Exercise Research Centre University of Exeter Exeter UK

3. Faculty of Kinesiology University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

4. Alberta Children's Hospital Reach Institute University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

5. Hotchkiss Brain Institute University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

6. Libin Cardiovascular Institute of Alberta University of Calgary Alberta Canada

7. Cerebrovascular Concussion Lab University of Calgary Calgary Alberta Canada

Abstract

AbstractDynamic cerebral autoregulation (dCA) describes the regulation of cerebral blood flow (CBF) in response to fluctuations in systemic blood pressure (BP). Heavy resistance exercise is known to induce large transient elevations in BP, which are translated into perturbations of CBF, and may alter dCA in the immediate aftermath. This study aimed to better quantify the time course of any acute alterations in dCA after resistance exercise. Following familiarisation to all procedures, 22 (14 male) healthy young adults (22 ± 2 years) completed an experimental trial and resting control trial, in a counterbalanced order. Repeated squat‐stand manoeuvres (SSM) at 0.05 and 0.10 Hz were used to quantify dCA before, and 10 and 45 min after four sets of ten repetition back squats at 70% of one repetition maximum, or time matched seated rest (control). Diastolic, mean and systolic dCA were quantified by transfer function analysis of BP (finger plethysmography) and middle cerebral artery blood velocity (transcranial Doppler ultrasound). Mean gain (p = 0.02; d = 0.36) systolic gain (p = 0.01; d = 0.55), mean normalised gain (p = 0.02; d = 0.28) and systolic normalised gain (p = 0.01; d = 0.67) were significantly elevated above baseline during 0.10 Hz SSM 10‐min post resistance exercise. This alteration was not present 45 min post‐exercise, and dCA indices were never altered during SSM at 0.05 Hz. dCA metrics were acutely altered 10 min post resistance exercise at the 0.10 Hz frequency only, which indicate changes in the sympathetic regulation of CBF. These alterations recovered 45 min post‐exercise.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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