Introduction: eccentric exercise (EE) has been widely used in rehabilitation and in improving physical fitness due to its mechanical advantage and less metabolic demand, however, EE can induce muscle damage providing structural changes and reduced muscle function, therefore, it is necessary to look for alternatives to reduce this damage caused by stress. Thus, ischemic preconditioning (PCI) can be seen as an aid in reducing the damage caused by EE, as it can attenuate the ischemia-reperfusion injury, and can be used to accelerate the post-exercise recovery process. Objectives: to compare the effects of PCI, using different occlusion pressures, on acute and late responses to perceptual outcomes and muscle injury markers, in addition to checking whether the technique causes deleterious effects on performance in post-exercise recovery. Methods: a randomized placebo controlled clinical trial will be conducted with 80 healthy men aged 18 to 35 years who will be randomly divided into four groups: PCI using total occlusion pressure (POT), PCI with 40% more than POT, placebo (10 mmHg) and control. The PCI protocol will consist of four cycles of ischemia and reperfusion of five minutes each. All groups will perform an EE protocol, initial assessments, immediately after the end of the EE, 24, 48, 72 and 96 hours after exercise, with the maximum isometric voluntary contraction (CVIM) assessed by the isokinetic dynamometer, vectors of cell integrity by by means of electrical bioimpedance (BIA), creatine kinase (CK), blood lactate, pain on the visual analog scale (VAS), pain threshold by the pressure algometer, and tone, muscle rigidity and elasticity by myotonometry. The descriptive statistical method and analysis of variance will be used for the repeated measures model. The level of significance will be p \<0.05.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
80
The IPC is characterized by the application of brief periods of circulatory occlusion (ischemia) and reperfusion of a limb in the minutes to hours that precede the exercise through the insufflations and deflations of a pressure cuff
Franciele Marques Vanderlei
Presidente Prudente, São Paulo, Brazil
Muscle damage
Plasma CK concentration will be obtained by means of 32 μL of capillary blood collected from the digital pulp.
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Blood lactate concentration
Blood lactate concentration of the participant will be collected 25 ml of blood with an ear lobe capillary
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Muscle strength in isokinetic
Maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC)
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Muscle pain
Assessed using a visual analog scale that ranges from 0 to 10 points, the higher the score, the worse the result.
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Pain threshold
Assessed using pressure algometer equipment, and the pain threshold will be classified according to the cut-off point of 2.55kgf. Participants will be classified as "sensitive to pain" if they have values below 2.55kgf.
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Resistance through Bioimpedance analysis (BIA)
Evaluation of tissue resistance, the higher the value, the worse the result
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Reactance through Bioimpedance analysis (BIA)
Evaluation of tissue reactance, the higher the value, the better the cell integrity
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Phase angle through Bioimpedance analysis (BIA)
Assessment of the phase angle, the higher the value, the better the condition of the participant
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Tone muscular through Myotonometry used the MyotonPRO equipment
Natural Oscillation Frequency \[Hz\], characterizing Tone of the quadriceps femoris muscle
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Stiffness through Myotonometry used the MyotonPRO equipment
Dynamic Stiffness \[N/m\] of the quadriceps femoris muscle
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Elasticity through Myotonometry used the MyotonPRO equipment
Mechanical Stress Relaxation Time \[ms\] featuring muscle elasticity of the quadriceps femoris muscle
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
Perception of recovery
Perception of recovery was obtained using a 10-point Likert Scale, with a rating of 1 indicating the feeling "not recovered" and a rating of 10 the feeling "fully recovered"
Time frame: Change from baseline at 96 hours after exercise
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