Acute Effects of Blood Flow Restriction Training on Movement Velocity and Neuromuscular Signal during the Back Squat Exercise

Author:

García-Sillero Manuel1ORCID,Maroto-Izquierdo Sergio2ORCID,Galván-García María1,Benitez-Porres Javier3ORCID,Vargas-Molina Salvador1ORCID,Jurado-Castro Jose Manuel456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Medicine, EADE-University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 29018 Malaga, Spain

2. Department of Health Sciences, European University Miguel de Cervantes (UEMC), 47012 Valladolid, Spain

3. Physical Education and Sport, Faculty of Medicine, University of Málaga, 29016 Málaga, Spain

4. Metabolism and Investigation Unit, Maimonides Biomedical Research Institute of Cordoba (IMIBIC), Reina Sofia University Hospital, University of Cordoba, 14004 Cordoba, Spain

5. CIBER Fisiopatología de la Obesidad y Nutrición (CIBEROBN), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, 28029 Madrid, Spain

6. Ciencias De La Actividad Física y El Deporte, Escuela Universitaria de Osuna (Centro Adscrito a la Universidad de Sevilla), 41640 Osuna, Spain

Abstract

The aim of this study was to verify the effects of blood flow restriction on movement velocity and muscle activity during the back squat exercise. Methods: Twenty-four university students participated in this study. In two randomized sessions 72 h apart, participants performed a 4-set protocol consisting of 30-15-15-15 repetitions performed at 30% of their one-repetition maximum in the back squat exercise. In both sessions, neuromuscular function was monitored by surface electromyography (EMG) and movement velocity (mean propulsive velocity (MPV), peak concentric velocity (Vmax), and the effort index (EI)). Blood flow restriction (BFR) was applied during exercise in one of the experimental sessions with 80% of full arterial occlusion pressure over lower limbs. Results: The BFR condition showed higher (p < 0.05) EI, peak, and rooted mean square normalized EMG in Set 1 compared to Set 2. Similar MPV and Vmax were observed in each set for both the BFR and control conditions. No significant differences were observed between conditions in any set. Conclusions: BFR did not imply changes in neuromuscular performance during low-intensity resistance training, but it might induce greater intra-series velocity loss and less excitation of the muscles involved.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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