Effects of high- and low-velocity resistance training on the contractile properties of skeletal muscle fibers from young and older humans

Author:

Claflin Dennis R.12,Larkin Lisa M.23,Cederna Paul S.1,Horowitz Jeffrey F.4,Alexander Neil B.56,Cole Neil M.7,Galecki Andrzej T.5,Chen Shu5,Nyquist Linda V.5,Carlson Bruce M.5,Faulkner John A.23,Ashton-Miller James A.28

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgery, Section of Plastic Surgery,

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering,

3. Department of Molecular and Integrative of Physiology,

4. School of Kinesiology, and

5. Institute of Gerontology, Division of Geriatric Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Michigan,

6. Veterans Affairs Ann Arbor Health Care System Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center and Veterans Affairs Medical Center, Ann Arbor;

7. Bio Logic Engineering, Inc., Dexter; and

8. Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

Abstract

A two-arm, prospective, randomized, controlled trial study was conducted to investigate the effects of movement velocity during progressive resistance training (PRT) on the size and contractile properties of individual fibers from human vastus lateralis muscles. The effects of age and sex were examined by a design that included 63 subjects organized into four groups: young (20–30 yr) men and women, and older (65–80 yr) men and women. In each group, one-half of the subjects underwent a traditional PRT protocol that involved shortening contractions at low velocities against high loads, while the other half performed a modified PRT protocol that involved contractions at 3.5 times higher velocity against reduced loads. Muscles were sampled by needle biopsy before and after the 14-wk PRT program, and functional tests were performed on permeabilized individual fiber segments isolated from the biopsies. We tested the hypothesis that, compared with low-velocity PRT, high-velocity PRT results in a greater increase in the cross-sectional area, force, and power of type 2 fibers. Both types of PRT increased the cross-sectional area, force, and power of type 2 fibers by 8–12%, independent of the sex or age of the subject. Contrary to our hypothesis, the velocity at which the PRT was performed did not affect the fiber-level outcomes substantially. We conclude that, compared with low-velocity PRT, resistance training performed at velocities up to 3.5 times higher against reduced loads is equally effective for eliciting an adaptive response in type 2 fibers from human skeletal muscle.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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