Coscia Francesco, Gigliotti Paola V, Foued Saadsaoud, Piratinskij Alexander, Pietrangelo Tiziana, Verratti Vittore, Diemberger Igor, Fanò-Illic Giorgio
Department of Medicine, University of Perugia, Ospedale "Santa Maria della Misericordia", Italy.
Laboratory of Sport Physiology, San Candido-Innichen, Italy.
Eur J Transl Myol. 2020 Nov 17;30(4):9477. doi: 10.4081/ejtm.2020.9477. eCollection 2020 Dec 31.
Global Proprioceptive Resonance (GPR) is a recently developed approach conceived to solicit the various cutaneous mechanoreceptors, through application of mechanical multifocal vibration at low amplitude and at definite body sites, limiting the stimulation of the profound structures. This interventional study evaluated the effects of GPR on cardiorespiratory function during the post-exertional recovery period. A group of volunteers involved in Triathlon (a multisport discipline consisting of sequential swim, cycle, and run disciplines higly demanding in terms of metabolic engagment), underwent two maximal incremental exercise tests until exhaustion followed alternatively to (a) a 13 minutes section of GPR or (b) a standard low intensity exercise acute trend of the same duration. These effects of these two approaches were compared in terms of recovery of: heart rate (HR), respiratory rate (RR), peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) and venous lactate concentration (Lac). The physiological parameters (HR, RR, SpO2 and Lac) recorded in the pre-exertion session showed similar values between the 40 volunteers while several differences were recorded in the post-exertion phase. After 6 min of GPR recovery it was recorded a drop in RR below baseline (19.4±4.15 min-1 vs. 12.2± 0.4 min-1; p<0.001) coupled with an increase in peripheral oxygen saturation above the baseline (GPR: 99.0%±0.16% vs. 96.6%±0.77%, p<0.001). Moreover, the most striking result was the drop in lactate concentration measured after 13 min of GPR recovery: 84.5±3.5% in GPR vs 2.9±7.6% reduction in standard recovery (p<0.001). Notably no differences were recorded recovery of heart rate. GPR has promising effects on post-exercise recovery on RR, SpO2 and lactate level on young athletes.
全球本体感觉共振(GPR)是一种最近开发的方法,旨在通过在身体特定部位施加低振幅的机械多焦点振动来刺激各种皮肤机械感受器,同时限制对深部结构的刺激。这项干预性研究评估了GPR在运动后恢复期对心肺功能的影响。一组参加铁人三项的志愿者(铁人三项是一项多运动项目,包括连续的游泳、骑自行车和跑步项目,对代谢参与度要求很高),进行了两次最大递增运动测试,直到精疲力竭,然后交替进行(a)13分钟的GPR治疗或(b)相同持续时间的标准低强度运动急性趋势。比较了这两种方法在心率(HR)、呼吸频率(RR)、外周血氧饱和度(SpO2)和静脉血乳酸浓度(Lac)恢复方面的效果。运动前阶段记录的生理参数(HR、RR、SpO2和Lac)在40名志愿者之间显示出相似的值,而在运动后阶段记录到了一些差异。在GPR恢复6分钟后,记录到RR下降到基线以下(19.4±4.15次/分钟 vs. 12.2±0.4次/分钟;p<0.001),同时外周血氧饱和度高于基线(GPR:99.0%±0.16% vs. 96.6%±0.77%,p<0.001)。此外,最显著的结果是在GPR恢复13分钟后测得的乳酸浓度下降:GPR组为84.5±3.5%,而标准恢复组下降2.9±7.6%(p<0.001)。值得注意的是,心率恢复方面没有记录到差异。GPR对年轻运动员运动后的RR、SpO2和乳酸水平恢复具有显著效果。