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Kinesiology Commons

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Resistance training

The University of Southern Mississippi

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Full-Text Articles in Kinesiology

Muscle Adaptations To High-Load Training And Very Low-Load Training With And Without Blood Flow Restriction, Matthew B. Jessee, Samuel L. Buckner, J. Grant Mouser, Kevin T. Mattocks, Scott J. Dankel, Takashi Abe, Zachary W. Bell, John P. Bentley, Jeremy P. Loenneke Oct 2018

Muscle Adaptations To High-Load Training And Very Low-Load Training With And Without Blood Flow Restriction, Matthew B. Jessee, Samuel L. Buckner, J. Grant Mouser, Kevin T. Mattocks, Scott J. Dankel, Takashi Abe, Zachary W. Bell, John P. Bentley, Jeremy P. Loenneke

Faculty Publications

An inability to lift loads great enough to disrupt muscular blood flow may impair the ability to fatigue muscles, compromising the hypertrophic response. It is unknown what level of blood flow restriction (BFR) pressure, if any, is necessary to reach failure at very low-loads [i.e., 15% one-repetition maximum (1RM)]. The purpose of this study was to investigate muscular adaptations following resistance training with a very low-load alone (15/0), with moderate BFR (15/40), or with high BFR (15/80), and compare them to traditional high-load (70/0) resistance training. Using a within/between subject design, healthy young participants (n = 40) performed four …