Department of Physiology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, United States.
Department of Kinesiology and Health Education, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, United States.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2023 Aug 1;135(2):260-270. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00274.2023. Epub 2023 Jun 22.
Blood flow restriction training (BFRT) employs partial vascular occlusion of exercising muscle and has been shown to increase muscle performance while using reduced workload and training time. Numerous studies have demonstrated that BFRT increases muscle hypertrophy, mitochondrial function, and beneficial vascular adaptations. However, changes in cardiovascular hemodynamics during the exercise protocol remain unknown, as most studies measured blood pressure before the onset and after the cessation of exercise. With reduced perfusion to the exercising muscle during BFRT, the resultant accumulation of metabolites within the ischemic muscle could potentially trigger a large reflex increase in blood pressure, termed the muscle metaboreflex. At low workloads, this pressor response occurs primarily via increases in cardiac output. However, when increases in cardiac output are limited (e.g., heart failure or during severe exercise), the reflex shifts to peripheral vasoconstriction as the primary mechanism to increase blood pressure, potentially increasing the risk of a cardiovascular event. Using our chronically instrumented conscious canine model, we utilized a 60% reduction in femoral blood pressure applied to the hindlimbs during steady-state treadmill exercise (3.2 km/h) to reproduce the ischemic environment observed during BFRT. We observed significant increases in heart rate (+19 ± 3 beats/min), stroke volume (+2.52 ± 1.2 mL), cardiac output (+1.21 ± 0.2 L/min), mean arterial pressure (+18.2 ± 2.4 mmHg), stroke work (+1.93 ± 0.2 L/mmHg), and nonischemic vascular conductance (+3.62 ± 1.7 mL/mmHg), indicating activation of the muscle metaboreflex. Blood flow restriction training (BFRT) increases muscle mass, strength, and endurance. There has been minimal consideration of the reflex cardiovascular responses that could be elicited during BFRT sessions. We showed that during low-intensity exercise BFRT may trigger large reflex increases in blood pressure and sympathetic activity due to muscle metaboreflex activation. Thus, we urge caution when employing BFRT, especially in patients in whom exaggerated cardiovascular responses may occur that could cause sudden, adverse cardiovascular events.
血流限制训练(BFRT)采用部分血管阻塞运动肌肉,已被证明可以在使用减少的工作量和训练时间的情况下提高肌肉性能。许多研究表明,BFRT 增加肌肉肥大、线粒体功能和有益的血管适应性。然而,在运动过程中心血管血液动力学的变化仍然未知,因为大多数研究在运动开始前和运动停止后测量血压。在 BFRT 期间,向运动肌肉的灌注减少,导致缺血肌肉中代谢物的积累可能潜在地触发血压的大量反射性增加,称为肌肉代谢反射。在低工作量下,这种升压反应主要通过心输出量的增加来发生。然而,当心输出量增加受到限制时(例如心力衰竭或剧烈运动期间),反射转移到外周血管收缩作为增加血压的主要机制,这可能会增加心血管事件的风险。在我们的慢性仪器化清醒犬模型中,我们使用 60%的股动脉血压降低来模拟 BFRT 期间观察到的缺血环境。在稳定状态跑步机运动(3.2 公里/小时)期间,我们观察到心率显著增加(+19±3 次/分钟)、每搏量增加(+2.52±1.2 毫升)、心输出量增加(+1.21±0.2 升/分钟)、平均动脉压增加(+18.2±2.4 毫米汞柱)、每搏功增加(+1.93±0.2 升/毫米汞柱)和非缺血血管传导率增加(+3.62±1.7 毫升/毫米汞柱),表明肌肉代谢反射的激活。血流限制训练(BFRT)增加肌肉质量、力量和耐力。很少考虑在 BFRT 期间可能引发的反射性心血管反应。我们表明,在低强度运动期间,由于肌肉代谢反射的激活,BFRT 可能会引发血压和交感神经活动的大量反射性增加。因此,当使用 BFRT 时,特别是在可能发生过度心血管反应的患者中,我们应该谨慎行事,因为这可能会导致突然的、不利的心血管事件。