| Literature DB >> 22419885 |
Dahan da Cunha Nascimento1, Frederico Ribeiro Neto, Frederico Santos de Santana, Renato André Sousa da Silva, Leopoldo Dos Santos-Neto, Sandor Balsamo.
Abstract
Physical inactivity is considered a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and is strongly associated with changes in arterial structure. Regular physical activity and exercise contributes to the prevention of coronary artery disease. Therefore, cardiovascular and resistance training improve hemostatic parameters and promote a less thrombotic blood profile. This review highlights the studies, mechanisms, and outcomes relating to the effectiveness of resistance training on the process of hemostasis. The Pubmed, Scopus, Medline, Scielo, Lilacs, Ibecs, and Cochrane databases were used to locate the original articles. Seventeen studies were found during the research process. Of these, ten articles were excluded. Those protocols using a high volume of training for young adults showed a greater fibrinolytic response, and training protocols with intensities above 80% of 1 maximum repetition showed an increased platelet activity. In subjects with coronary artery disease, just one session of resistance training resulted in improvement in the fibrinolytic system (tissue plasminogen activator) without raising potential thrombotic markers.Entities:
Keywords: blood coagulation; fibrinolysis; resistance training
Year: 2012 PMID: 22419885 PMCID: PMC3302766 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S29197
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Short-term effects of resistance training on hemostasis in healthy individuals
| Authors | Age in years (SD) | Training protocol | Hemostatic variables | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| El-Sayed | 25 (3.2) | Protocol 1: 1–5 reps, 90%–100% 1 RM; | PAI-1, t-PA, VIII/FVIII | t-PA (HV vs LV) = @ ↑; PAI-1 (HV vs LV) = @ ↓; VIII/FVIII (HV vs LV) = @ ↑ |
| Ahmadizad and El-Sayed | 26 (7.0) | Protocol 1: 10 reps; 40% 1 RM | MPV, PCT, PLT, B-TG | MPV (40%, 60% and 80%) = NS; PCT and PLT (40%, 60%, 80% vs rest) = @ ↑; B-TG (80% vs rest) = @ ↓ |
| Ahmadizad and El-sayed | 27 (4.8) | Protocol: 5–7 reps; | PLV, fibrinogen | PLV and fibrinogen (IAE vs rest) = @ ↑ |
| Ahmadizad et al | 27 (4.8) | Protocol: 5–7 reps; 80% 1 RM | B-TG | B-TG (rec vs rest) = @ ↑; B-TG (IAE vs rest) = @ ↑ |
| DeJong et al | 57 (9.0) | Protocol: 10 reps; 10 RMs | PAI-1, t-PA, FvW | FvW = NS; t-PA (IAE vs rest) = @ ↑; PA-1 (IAE vs rest) = @ ↓; PA-1 (recup vs rest) = @ ↓ |
| Nagelkirk et al | Protocol: 10 reps; 70% 1 RM | TAT, t-PA, PAI-1 | t-PA in HF and LF (rec vs rest) = @ ↓; PAI-1 in rest (HF vs LF) = @ ↑; TAT (HF vs LF) = NS | |
| Ahmadizad et al | 29 (4.5) | Protocol: 7 reps; 80% 1 RM | B-TG e PA | PA (morning rest vs evening rest) = @ ↑; B-TG (morning vs evening) = NS; B-TG (IAE morning and evening vs rest) = @ ↑ |
Notes:
Study without control group;
trainability not reported by the authors;
use of medications;
rest interval;
exclusion of the other participants not specified by the authors; @ ↑↓ = significant increase and decrease.
Abbreviations: SD, standard deviation; CAD, coronary artery disease; reps, repetitions; RM, maximum repetition; s, second (time); t-PA, tissue plasminogen activator; PAI-1, plasminogen activator inhibitor; FvW, von Willebrand factor; FVIII, factor antihemophílic; MPV, mean platelet volume; PLV, plasma viscosity; PCT, plateletcrit; PLT, platelet count; TAT, thrombin-antithrombin complex; PA, platelet activation; B-TG, beta-thromboglobulin; LV, low volume; HV, high volume; NS, no significant difference between the groups or between the protocols in the aspects evaluated; LF, low fat; HF, high fat; IAE, immediately after exercise; rec, followed by 30 minutes recovery.