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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06746792
NA

Low Load, High Gains: Blood Flow Restriction's Impact on Quadriceps Adaptations

Sponsor: Karabuk University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Low-load resistance exercise with blood flow restriction (BFR-RE) presents a compelling alternative to high-load resistance exercise (HL-RE), particularly in scenarios where high loads are not feasible due to various limitations. Blood flow restriction exercise restricts blood flow to the working muscle, creating a state of ischemia. A significant advantage of BFR-RE lies in its capacity to stimulate muscle hypertrophy and strength adaptations using light external loads (20-30% 1RM), comparable to those achieved with high-load (HL) training programs that employ 70-85% 1RM As a result, BFR training has been increasingly adopted in both athletic performance and rehabilitation settings over the past few decades. Quadriceps strength and power are essential factors in both the advancement of athletic performance and the successful return to unrestricted sporting activity following injury. The findings of Culvenor et al.'s review strongly suggest that weakened quadriceps strength is a significant risk factor for symptomatic and functional decline in the knee during both activities of daily living and sport-recreational activities. Numerous electromyographic (EMG) findings suggest that single-joint and multijoint exercises elicit varying muscle activation patterns. For instance, single-joint exercises targeting the quadriceps, such as leg extensions, demonstrate higher EMG amplitudes compared to multijoint lower-extremity exercises like leg presses and squats. Resistance training, characterized by the application of high mechanical tension, remains the cornerstone for promoting muscle hypertrophy, So, research suggests that higher training intensities are associated with greater hypertrophy, up to a certain point. While both light and heavy loads have been shown to elicit similar muscle growth when sets are taken to failure. Studies have reported that high-repetition training with light loads leads to greater central fatigue. Existing literature comparing the effects of BFR-RE and HL-RE primarily focuses on the some quadriceps and hamstring muscle group and its associated exercises. However, none of these studies employed a training protocol in which sets were taken to or near failure.

Key Details

Gender

MALE

Age Range

18 Years - 25 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

30

Start Date

2024-10-11

Completion Date

2025-03-29

Last Updated

2025-03-04

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

OTHER

Low-load resistance exercise with blood flow restriction

BFR-RE group performed bilateral leg extension exercises to volitional exhaustion (90 seconds rest between sets, 30% 1RM) with BFR cuffs applied at 60% of limb occlusion pressure.

OTHER

High-load resistance exercise

The HL-RE group performed the same exercise to volitional exhaustion (90 seconds rest between sets, 70% 1RM) without BFR cuffs.

Locations (1)

Karabuk University Faculty of Sports Sciences

Karabük, Turkey (Türkiye)