Literature DB >> 29345532

Ischemic Preconditioning: No Influence on Maximal Sprint Acceleration Performance.

Kyle M A Thompson, Alanna K Whinton, Shane Ferth, Lawrence L Spriet, Jamie F Burr.   

Abstract

Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) was initially developed to protect the myocardium from ischemia through altered cardiocyte metabolism. Because of the observed effects on metabolism and oxygen kinetics, IPC gained interest as a potential ergogenic aid in sports. Limited research evaluating the effects of IPC on maximal short-duration activities has been performed, and of the existing literature, mixed outcomes resulting from intrasubject variation may have clouded the efficacy of this technique for enhancing sprint performance. Therefore, the current study employed a randomized repeated-measures crossover design with IPC, placebo (SHAM), and control conditions while using sprint-trained athletes (N = 18) to determine the effect of IPC (3 × 5-min occlusions, with 5-min reperfusion), concluding 15 min prior to maximal 10-s and 20-m sprinting. A visual analog scale was used in conjunction with the sprint trials to evaluate any possible placebo effect on performance. Despite a "significantly beneficial" perception of the IPC treatment compared with the SHAM trials (P < .001), no changes in sprint performance were observed after either the IPC or SHAM condition over 10 m (IPC Δ  < 0.01 [0.02] s, SHAM Δ  < 0.01 [0.02] s) or 20 m (IPC Δ = -0.01 [0.03] s, SHAM Δ < 0.01 [0.03] s) compared with control. Thus, an IPC protocol does not improve 10- or 20-m sprint performance in sprint-trained athletes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  anaerobic exercise; blood-flow occlusion; ergogenic aid; skeletal muscle; sprinting

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29345532     DOI: 10.1123/ijspp.2017-0540

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Sports Physiol Perform        ISSN: 1555-0265            Impact factor:   4.010


  2 in total

1.  The Acute Effects of Ischemic Preconditioning on Power and Sprint Performance.

Authors:  Tiegen D Lindner; Shane D Scholten; Jayde M Halverson; Keith M Baumgarten; Chad B Birger; Brett G Nowotny
Journal:  S D Med       Date:  2021-05

2.  Active Preconditioning With Blood Flow Restriction or/and Systemic Hypoxic Exposure Does Not Improve Repeated Sprint Cycling Performance.

Authors:  Mathias R Aebi; Sarah J Willis; Olivier Girard; Fabio Borrani; Grégoire P Millet
Journal:  Front Physiol       Date:  2019-11-14       Impact factor: 4.566

  2 in total

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