Volume Reduction: Which Dose is Sufficient to Retain Resistance Training Adaptations in Older Women?

Author:

Antunes Melissa1,Kassiano Witalo1ORCID,Silva Analiza M.2,Schoenfeld Brad J.3,Ribeiro Alex S.4,Costa Bruna1ORCID,Cunha Paolo M.1ORCID,Júnior Paulo Sugihara1,Cyrino Letícia T.1,Teixeira Denilson C.1,Sardinha Luís B.2,Cyrino Edilson S.1

Affiliation:

1. Metabolism, Nutrition, and Exercise Laboratory, Physical Education and Sport Center, State University of Londrina, Londrina, PR, Brazil

2. Exercise and Health Laboratory, CIPER, Faculdade de Motricidade Humana, Universidade de Lisboa, Lisboa, Portugal.

3. Exercise Science Program, Lehman College of CUNY Department of Health Sciences, Bronx, United States

4. University of Northern Paraná, Londrina, PR, Brazil.

Abstract

AbstractWe compared the effects of different resistance training (RT) volume reduction strategies on muscular strength and lean soft-tissue (LST) in older women. Fifty-seven physically independent women (>60 years) performed a 20-week pre-conditioning phase of a standardized whole-body RT program (eight exercises, three sets, 8–12 repetitions, three sessions a week), and were then randomly assigned to one of the following conditions: reduced volume for a single set (RV1, n=20) or two sets (RV2, n=19), or maintained volume of three sets (MV, n=18) for 8 weeks (specific training phase). Muscular strength in the chest press, leg extension, and preacher curl exercises was determined by one-repetition maximum tests. A dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry device was used to estimate LST. An increase in muscular strength (16.3–32.1%) and LST (3.2–7.9%) was observed after the pre-conditioning phase. There was an increase in chest press for all groups (9.4–16.7%) after the specific training phase. In contrast, only MV increased significantly in the leg extension (4.4%). No between-group differences were revealed for LST in the specific training phase. Our results suggest that reduced RT volume from three to one set per exercise for 8 weeks seems sufficient to retain neuromuscular adaptations in older women.

Funder

Ministry of Education (MEC/Brazil) and CNPq/Brazil

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

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

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