Differential expression of muscle damage in humans following acute fast and slow velocity eccentric exercise


Autoria(s): Paddon-Jones, D.; Keech, A.; Lonergan, A.; Abernethy, P.
Contribuinte(s)

B. Abernethy

Data(s)

01/08/2005

Resumo

We sought to determine if the velocity of an acute bout of eccentric contractions influenced the duration and severity of several common indirect markers of muscle damage. Subjects performed 36 maximal fast (FST, n=8: 3.14 rad center dot s(-1)) or slow (SLW, n=7: 0.52 rad center dot s(-1)) velocity isokinetic eccentric contractions with the elbow flexors of the non-dominant arm. Muscle soreness, limb girth, plasma creatine kinase (CK) activity, isometric torque and concentric and eccentric torque at 0.52 and 3.14 rad center dot s(-1) were assessed prior to and for several days following the eccentric bout. Peak plasma CK activity was similar in SLW (4030 +/- 1029 U center dot l(-1)) and FST (5864 +/- 2664 U center dot l(-1)) groups, (p > 0.05). Both groups experienced similar decrement in all strength variables during the 48 hr following the eccentric bout. However, recovery occurred more rapidly in the FST group during eccentric (0.52 and 3.14 rad center dot s(-1)) and concentric (3.14 rad center dot s(-1)) post-testing. The severity of muscle soreness was similar in both groups. However, the FST group experienced peak muscle soreness 48 hr later than the SLW group (24 hr vs. 72 hr). The SLW group experienced a greater increase in upper arm girth than the FST group 20 min, 24 hr and 96 hr following the eccentric exercise bout. The contraction velocity of an acute bout of eccentric exercise differentially influences the magnitude and time course of several indirect markers of muscle damage.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75359

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Sports Medicine Australia

Palavras-Chave #Sport Sciences #Morphological-changes #Repeated Bouts #Inflammation #Adaptation #Soreness #Force #Activation #Symptoms #Females #Males #C1 #321401 Exercise Physiology #730220 Injury control
Tipo

Journal Article