Affiliation:
1. University Outpatient Clinic, Sports Medicine & Sports
Orthopaedics, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany
Abstract
AbstractEccentric exercise is discussed as a treatment option for clinical populations,
but specific responses in terms of muscle damage and systemic inflammation after
repeated loading of large muscle groups have not been conclusively
characterized. Therefore, this study tested the feasibility of an isokinetic
protocol for repeated maximum eccentric loading of the trunk muscles. Nine
asymptomatic participants (5 f/4 m;
34±6 yrs; 175±13 cm; 76±17 kg)
performed three isokinetic 2-minute all-out trunk strength tests (1x concentric
(CON), 2x eccentric (ECC1, ECC2), 2 weeks apart; flexion/extension,
60°/s, ROM 55°). Outcomes were peak torque, torque
decline, total work, and indicators of muscle damage and inflammation (over
168 h). Statistics were done using the Friedman test (Dunn’s
post-test). For ECC1 and ECC2, peak torque and total work were increased and
torque decline reduced compared to CON. Repeated ECC bouts yielded unaltered
torque and work outcomes. Muscle damage markers were highest after ECC1
(soreness 48 h, creatine kinase 72 h; p<0.05). Their
overall responses (area under the curve) were abolished post-ECC2 compared to
post-ECC1 (p<0.05). Interleukin-6 was higher post-ECC1 than CON, and
attenuated post-ECC2 (p>0.05). Interleukin-10 and tumor necrosis
factor-α were not detectable. All markers showed high inter-individual
variability. The protocol was feasible to induce muscle damage indicators after
exercising a large muscle group, but the pilot results indicated only weak
systemic inflammatory responses in asymptomatic adults.