95% Reduced CK (Marker of Muscle Damage) + Pain After Eccentric Curls W/ Ischemic Pre-Conditioning (3x5min BFR)
95% Reduced CK (Marker of Muscle Damage) + Pain After Eccentric Curls W/ Ischemic Pre-Conditioning (3x5min BFR)
95% Reduced CK (Marker of Muscle Damage) + Pain After Eccentric Curls W/ Ischemic Pre-Conditioning (3x5min BFR)
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In the study at hand, the cuffs were applied before, not during the exercise. |
You can learn more about BFR and Hypoxia Training at the SuppVersity
[d]ue to similarities between the pathophysiological formation of I/R-injury and eccentric exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD), as characterized by an intracellular accumulation of Ca2+, an increased production of reactive oxygen species and increased pro-inflammatory signaling, [...] IPC performed prior to eccentric exercise may also protect against EIMD [exercise induced muscle damage]" (Franz 2017).To confirm or falsify this assumption Fritz et al. recruited nineteen untrained healthy men and had them perform a standardized exercise protocol consisting of bilateral biceps curls (3x10 repetitions at 80% of the concentric 1RM), during which the subjects were assisted on the concentric part of the exercise until they reached an elbow flexion of ~50�. To accommodate for the previously discussed high inter-personal variability in subjects' creatine kinase [~muscle damage] response to exercise, the authors matched their subjects to the preconditioning (IPC+ECC) and control (ECC) group based on their CK response to an identical 1-RM test all participants had to do before the actual experiment.
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Hong et al. (2017) took a closer look at the acute protective effects of IPC, albeit in rodents and not in response to eccentric exercise but in response to prolonged reperfusion stress. |
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Figure 1: Graphical overview o the study design. |
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Figure 2: Creatine kinase (U/L) and arm circumference (cm) in the hours/days after the eccentric workout (Fritz 2017). |
- CK differed from baseline only in ECC at 48h (p<0.001) and 72h (p<0.001) post-exercise,
- after 24h, 48h and 72h, CK was increased in ECC compared to IPC+ECC (between groups: 24h: p=0.004, 48h: p<0.001, 72h: p<0.001).
The swelling of the arm(s), on the other hand, did not differ significantly. Since the same goes the muscle contractility that was measured by tensiomyography it is, in the absence of data on the short-term effects on muscle recovery and potential long-term effects on gains, difficult to tell how much of an advantage the impressive reduction in markers of muscle damage actually is.
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Figure 3: Future studies will have to show what the pain reduction is worth. |
With both CK and pain (see Figure 3) being reduced, we have good reason to believe that the ischemic preconditioning did reduce muscle damage. What we shouldn't do, though, is to assume that the reduction in CK mirrors the actual reduction in muscle damage was identical to the reduction in 24-72h creatine kinase levels of ~95%. In the absence of changes in the contractile properties of the muscles and without (a) data about short-term effects on muscle strength and (b) long-term effects on training induced adaptation in form of strength and size increases, we will need follow-up studies to (i) tell us what the real-world effects of IPC are (in terms of acute strength and long-term gains) and whether it (ii) will work just as well for trained athletes, in whom the creatine kinase response is reduced compared to rookies.
Before these studies have not been done and the safety of using BFR for ischemic pre-conditioning has been confirmed, I would not recommend using it in athletes and/or gymrats, though | Comment!
- D'ascenzo, Fabrizio, et al. "Remote ischaemic preconditioning in coronary artery bypass surgery: a meta-analysis." Heart 98.17 (2012): 1267-1271.
- Hong, Yang, et al. "Cell membrane integrity and revascularization: The possible functional mechanism of ischemic preconditioning for skeletal muscle protection against ischemic-reperfusion injury." Acta Histochemica 119.3 (2017): 309-314.
- Walsh, Stewart R., et al. "Ischaemic preconditioning during cardiac surgery: systematic review and meta-analysis of perioperative outcomes in randomised clinical trials." European Journal of Cardio-Thoracic Surgery 34.5 (2008): 985-994.
- Takagi, Hisato, et al. "Review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled clinical trials of remote ischemic preconditioning in cardiovascular surgery." The American journal of cardiology 102.11 (2008): 1487-1488.
95% Reduced CK (Marker of Muscle Damage) + Pain After Eccentric Curls W/ Ischemic Pre-Conditioning (3x5min BFR)
95% Reduced CK (Marker of Muscle Damage) + Pain After Eccentric Curls W/ Ischemic Pre-Conditioning (3x5min BFR)
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