Movement Velocity as a Determinant of Actual Intensity in Resistance Exercise

Author:

García Juan Manuel Yáñez1ORCID,Mora-Custodio Ricardo1,Ribas-Serna Juan23,González-Badillo Juan José13,Rodríguez-Rosell David13

Affiliation:

1. Department os Sport and Informatic, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Seville, Spain

2. Department of Medical Physiology and Biophysics, Universidad de Sevilla, Sevilla, Spain

3. Research, development and innovation (R&D+i) Area, Investigation in Medicine and Sport department, Sevilla Football Club, Seville, Spain

Abstract

AbstractThis study aimed to analyze the acute mechanical, metabolic and EMG response to five resistance exercise protocols (REP) in the full squat (SQ) exercise performed with two velocity conditions: maximal intended velocity (MaxV) vs. half-maximal velocity (HalfV). Eleven resistance-trained men performed 10 REP (5 with each velocity conditions) in random order (72–96 h apart). The REP consisted of three sets of 8–3 repetitions against 45–65% 1RM. The percent change in countermovement jump (CMJ) height, velocity attained with the load that elicited a ~1.00 m·s−1 (V1-load), surface EMG variables and blood lactate concentration were assessed pre- vs. post-exercise protocols. MaxV resulted in greater percent changes (Δ: 12–25%) and intra-condition effect sizes (ES: 0.76–4.84) in loss of V1-load and CMJ height compared to HalfV (Δ: 10–16%; ES: 0.65–3.90) following all REP. In addition, MaxV showed higher post-exercise lactate concentration than HalfV (ES: 0.46–0.83; p<0.05). For EMG variables, only the Dimitrov index resulted in relevant changes after each REP, with MaxV showing greater magnitude of changes (23–38%) than HalfV (12–25%) across all REP. These results suggest that voluntary movement velocity is a key aspect to consider since it clearly determines the overall training intensity during resistance exercise.

Publisher

Georg Thieme Verlag KG

Subject

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

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