Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading

Variable resistance training (VRT) such as that employed by equipment that utilizes asymmetrical cams or pulleys (ASYM CAM) (e.g., Nautilus Machines) and elastic resistance (ELASTIC) are commonly used by athletes and fitness enthusiasts. However, the use of ELASTIC in high intensity training protoco...

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Main Authors: Aboodarda, S.J., Ibrahim, F., Mokhtar, A.H., Thompson, M.W., Behm, D.G.
Format: Article
Published: American Society of Exercise Physiologists 2012
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Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/14431/
https://www.asep.org/asep/asep/JEPonlineDECEMBER2012_Aboodarda.pdf
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spelling my.um.eprints.144312017-11-01T05:57:11Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/14431/ Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading Aboodarda, S.J. Ibrahim, F. Mokhtar, A.H. Thompson, M.W. Behm, D.G. GV Recreation Leisure R Medicine Variable resistance training (VRT) such as that employed by equipment that utilizes asymmetrical cams or pulleys (ASYM CAM) (e.g., Nautilus Machines) and elastic resistance (ELASTIC) are commonly used by athletes and fitness enthusiasts. However, the use of ELASTIC in high intensity training protocols has been controversial due to the limitation of providing a relatively low external force. The purpose of this study was designed to quantify and compare the acute responses in electromyogram signals (EMG) and the concentration of serum growth hormone ([GH]), testosterone ([T]), and lactate ([LA]) following fatiguing knee extension exercise with ELASTIC and ASYM CAM. In a counterbalanced cross-over study, nine male (21.08 ± 6.2 yrs) recreationally active subjects completed 5 sets of 10-RM knee extension exercise with ELASTIC and ASYM CAM with 3 wks of no training between experimental conditions. Blood sampling, maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) and EMG were recorded before, immediately, 15, 30, and 60 min after the termination of the exercise bout. The average of applied forces with ASYM CAM was significantly higher than ELASTIC (362 ± 34.2 N vs. 266.73 ± 58.56 N; P = .00) across the 5 sets of dynamic exercises. However, the average force and mean amplitude of MVC as well as the [GH], [T] and [LA] demonstrated no significant difference between the two types of exercise either in the pretest or during the recovery period (all P>0.05). Contrary to the traditional approach of using ELASTIC, which is for early rehabilitation purposes, the findings of the present study suggest ELASTIC is an acceptable exercise device for high intensity resistance training in the final stages of rehabilitation as well as athletic conditioning. American Society of Exercise Physiologists 2012-12 Article PeerReviewed Aboodarda, S.J. and Ibrahim, F. and Mokhtar, A.H. and Thompson, M.W. and Behm, D.G. (2012) Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading. Journal of Exercise Physiology - Online, 15 (6). pp. 1-12. ISSN 1097-9751 https://www.asep.org/asep/asep/JEPonlineDECEMBER2012_Aboodarda.pdf
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
topic GV Recreation Leisure
R Medicine
spellingShingle GV Recreation Leisure
R Medicine
Aboodarda, S.J.
Ibrahim, F.
Mokhtar, A.H.
Thompson, M.W.
Behm, D.G.
Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
description Variable resistance training (VRT) such as that employed by equipment that utilizes asymmetrical cams or pulleys (ASYM CAM) (e.g., Nautilus Machines) and elastic resistance (ELASTIC) are commonly used by athletes and fitness enthusiasts. However, the use of ELASTIC in high intensity training protocols has been controversial due to the limitation of providing a relatively low external force. The purpose of this study was designed to quantify and compare the acute responses in electromyogram signals (EMG) and the concentration of serum growth hormone ([GH]), testosterone ([T]), and lactate ([LA]) following fatiguing knee extension exercise with ELASTIC and ASYM CAM. In a counterbalanced cross-over study, nine male (21.08 ± 6.2 yrs) recreationally active subjects completed 5 sets of 10-RM knee extension exercise with ELASTIC and ASYM CAM with 3 wks of no training between experimental conditions. Blood sampling, maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) and EMG were recorded before, immediately, 15, 30, and 60 min after the termination of the exercise bout. The average of applied forces with ASYM CAM was significantly higher than ELASTIC (362 ± 34.2 N vs. 266.73 ± 58.56 N; P = .00) across the 5 sets of dynamic exercises. However, the average force and mean amplitude of MVC as well as the [GH], [T] and [LA] demonstrated no significant difference between the two types of exercise either in the pretest or during the recovery period (all P>0.05). Contrary to the traditional approach of using ELASTIC, which is for early rehabilitation purposes, the findings of the present study suggest ELASTIC is an acceptable exercise device for high intensity resistance training in the final stages of rehabilitation as well as athletic conditioning.
format Article
author Aboodarda, S.J.
Ibrahim, F.
Mokhtar, A.H.
Thompson, M.W.
Behm, D.G.
author_facet Aboodarda, S.J.
Ibrahim, F.
Mokhtar, A.H.
Thompson, M.W.
Behm, D.G.
author_sort Aboodarda, S.J.
title Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
title_short Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
title_full Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
title_fullStr Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
title_full_unstemmed Acute Neuromuscular and Hormonal Responses to Resistance Exercise Using Variable External Resistance Loading
title_sort acute neuromuscular and hormonal responses to resistance exercise using variable external resistance loading
publisher American Society of Exercise Physiologists
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/14431/
https://www.asep.org/asep/asep/JEPonlineDECEMBER2012_Aboodarda.pdf
_version_ 1643689814100279296
score 13.19449