Sex differences in muscle-quality recovery following one week of knee joint immobilization and subsequent retraining

Author:

Girts Ryan M.1,Harmon Kylie K.2ORCID,Rodriguez Gabriela3,Beausejour Jonathan P.3,Pagan Jason I.3,Carr Joshua C.45ORCID,Garcia Jeanette6,Stout Jeffrey R.3,Fukuda David H.3,Stock Matt S.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Natural and Health Sciences, Pfeiffer University, Misenheimer, NC, USA

2. Department of Exercise ScienceSyracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA

3. Institute of Exercise Physiology and Rehabilitation Science, School of Kinesiology and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Central Florida, Orlando, FL, USA

4. Department of Kinesiology, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, USA

5. Department of Medical Education, Anne Burnett Marion School of Medicine at Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, USA

6. School of Sport Sciences West Virginia University, Morgantown, WV, USA

Abstract

This manuscript represents the second phase of a clinical trial designed to examine the effects of knee joint immobilization and retraining on muscle strength and mass. In Phase 2, we examined sex differences in the recovery of multiple indices of muscle quality after a resistance training-based rehabilitation program. Following 1 week of immobilization, 27 participants (16 males, 11 females) exhibiting weakness underwent twice weekly resistance training sessions designed to re-strengthen their left knee. Unilateral retraining sessions utilizing leg press, extension, and curl exercises were conducted until participants could reproduce their pre-immobilization knee extension isometric maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) peak torque. Post-immobilization, both sexes demonstrated impaired MVC peak torque (males = −10.8%, females = −15.2%), specific torque (−9.8% vs. −13.1%), echo intensity of the vastus lateralis (+6.9% vs. +5.9%) and rectus femoris (+5.9% vs. +2.1), and extracellular water/intracellular water ratio (+7.8% vs. +9.0%). The number of retraining sessions for peak torque to return to baseline for males (median = 1, mean = 2.13) versus females (median = 2, mean = 2.91) was not significantly different, though the disparity in recovery times may be clinically relevant. Following retraining, specific torque was the only muscle-quality indicator that improved along with MVC peak torque (males = 20.1%, females = 22.4%). Our findings indicate that measures of muscle quality demonstrate divergent recovery rates following immobilization, with muscle mass lagging behind improvements in strength. Greater immobilization-induced strength loss among females suggests that sex-specific rehabilitation efforts may be justified.

Funder

University of Central Florida

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

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