Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury

Skeletal muscle loss poses significant health issues to both the general clinical population, but also athletes recovering from musculoskeletal (MSK) injury. Whilst resistance training is known to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy (SMH), 70% of an individual’s one repetition maximum (1RM) is requi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Michael Bower
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Universities Strength and Conditioning Association 2021-01-01
Series:International Journal of Strength and Conditioning
Online Access:https://journal.iusca.org/index.php/Journal/article/view/42
id doaj-1c324742ac0c46d284e6488de12ea22c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1c324742ac0c46d284e6488de12ea22c2021-03-26T10:21:19ZengInternational Universities Strength and Conditioning AssociationInternational Journal of Strength and Conditioning2634-22352021-01-011110.47206/ijsc.v1i1.42Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal InjuryMichael Bower0University of Leeds Skeletal muscle loss poses significant health issues to both the general clinical population, but also athletes recovering from musculoskeletal (MSK) injury. Whilst resistance training is known to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy (SMH), 70% of an individual’s one repetition maximum (1RM) is required to elicit such changes. This is not always feasible for the abovementioned populations due to rheumatic limitations and thus, targeting metabolic stress as a stimulus for skeletal muscle hypertrophy may be more favourable than that of mechanical tension. Blood Flow Restriction (BFR) training occludes venous out-flow, whilst sustaining arterial in-flow to the working muscle resulting in a pooling of anaerobic metabolites. As a result, resistance training loads as low as 20% 1RM are capable of eliciting hypertrophic effects equivalent to training at heavier loads, and this is mediated through both endocrine and intramuscular mechanisms. Safe administration of BFR is paramount, especially when prescribing to post-surgical athletes. As such, the coach or clinician in question must take careful consideration regarding pressure application, rest periods and various patient characteristics such as post-surgical timeframe and overall health status. https://journal.iusca.org/index.php/Journal/article/view/42
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Bower
spellingShingle Michael Bower
Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
International Journal of Strength and Conditioning
author_facet Michael Bower
author_sort Michael Bower
title Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
title_short Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
title_full Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
title_fullStr Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Stress and Blood Flow Restriction Training as Interventions for Skeletal Muscle Atrophy following Musculoskeletal Injury
title_sort metabolic stress and blood flow restriction training as interventions for skeletal muscle atrophy following musculoskeletal injury
publisher International Universities Strength and Conditioning Association
series International Journal of Strength and Conditioning
issn 2634-2235
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Skeletal muscle loss poses significant health issues to both the general clinical population, but also athletes recovering from musculoskeletal (MSK) injury. Whilst resistance training is known to induce skeletal muscle hypertrophy (SMH), 70% of an individual’s one repetition maximum (1RM) is required to elicit such changes. This is not always feasible for the abovementioned populations due to rheumatic limitations and thus, targeting metabolic stress as a stimulus for skeletal muscle hypertrophy may be more favourable than that of mechanical tension. Blood Flow Restriction (BFR) training occludes venous out-flow, whilst sustaining arterial in-flow to the working muscle resulting in a pooling of anaerobic metabolites. As a result, resistance training loads as low as 20% 1RM are capable of eliciting hypertrophic effects equivalent to training at heavier loads, and this is mediated through both endocrine and intramuscular mechanisms. Safe administration of BFR is paramount, especially when prescribing to post-surgical athletes. As such, the coach or clinician in question must take careful consideration regarding pressure application, rest periods and various patient characteristics such as post-surgical timeframe and overall health status.
url https://journal.iusca.org/index.php/Journal/article/view/42
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelbower metabolicstressandbloodflowrestrictiontrainingasinterventionsforskeletalmuscleatrophyfollowingmusculoskeletalinjury
_version_ 1724202211819388928