Department of Exercise and Sport Science, Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.
J Athl Train. 2013 Mar-Apr;48(2):209-19. doi: 10.4085/1062-6050-48.1.17. Epub 2013 Feb 20.
Disruptions to habitual training routines are commonly due to injury or illness and can often lead to detraining adaptations. The implications of such adaptations to the human vasculature in a trained, asymptomatic population are not fully understood.
To determine the extent of local and systemic changes in arterial diameter and blood flow to resistance training and subsequent detraining in young adults.
Randomized controlled clinical trial.
University physiology laboratory and fitness suite.
Twenty-one healthy volunteers (aged 20.0 ± 2.8 years, 11 men and 10 women).
INTERVENTION(S): Eight-week lower limb resistance training period and subsequent 4-week detraining period.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): Quadriceps and hamstrings concentric torque (strength), resting heart rate, arterial diameter, and blood flow velocity in the superficial femoral and carotid arteries were measured at 0, 8, 10, and 12 weeks.
Resistance training increased quadriceps and hamstring strength (32% and 35%, respectively, P < .001), whereas strength decreased during detraining (24% and 27%, respectively, P < .05). Resting heart rate decreased after resistance training (16%, P < .01) and increased during detraining (19%, P < .001). Additionally, resistance training significantly increased superficial femoral and carotid resting arterial diameters (27% and 13%, respectively, P < .001) and mean blood flow (53% and 55%, respectively, P < .001). Detraining resulted in a significant decrease in superficial femoral and carotid resting diameter (46% and 10%, respectively, P < .001) and mean blood flow (61% and 38%, respectively, P < .05).
Resistance training initiated both local and systemic changes to arterial diameter and blood flow; these changes appeared to reverse after detraining. The local changes in response to detraining showed a worsening (beyond pretraining values) of the vascular dimensional and blood flow characteristics.
习惯性训练常规的中断通常是由于受伤或患病引起的,往往会导致停训适应。对于训练有素的无症状人群,这种适应对人体血管的影响尚不完全清楚。
确定年轻人在进行抗阻训练及随后停训时,动脉直径和血流的局部和全身变化程度。
随机对照临床试验。
大学生理学实验室和健身室。
21 名健康志愿者(年龄 20.0±2.8 岁,11 名男性和 10 名女性)。
8 周下肢抗阻训练期和随后的 4 周停训期。
股四头肌和腘绳肌向心扭矩(力量)、静息心率、股浅动脉和颈动脉的动脉直径和血流速度,分别在 0、8、10 和 12 周时进行测量。
抗阻训练使股四头肌和腘绳肌力量分别增加了 32%和 35%(均 P<0.001),而停训时力量分别下降了 24%和 27%(均 P<0.05)。抗阻训练后静息心率下降(16%,P<0.01),停训时上升(19%,P<0.001)。此外,抗阻训练显著增加了股浅动脉和颈动脉的静息动脉直径(分别增加了 27%和 13%,均 P<0.001)和平均血流速度(分别增加了 53%和 55%,均 P<0.001)。停训导致股浅动脉和颈动脉静息直径显著下降(分别下降 46%和 10%,均 P<0.001)和平均血流速度下降(分别下降 61%和 38%,均 P<0.05)。
抗阻训练引起了动脉直径和血流的局部和全身变化;这些变化在停训后似乎逆转。停训后局部变化显示血管尺寸和血流特征恶化(超过训练前值)。