| Literature DB >> 31636569 |
Júlio Cesar Gomes Silva1,2,3,4, Elísio Alves Pereira Neto1,2,5, Patrick Alan Souza Pfeiffer1,2, Gabriel Rodrigues Neto2,3,4, Amanda Santos Rodrigues2, Michael G Bemben6, Stephen D Patterson7, Gilmário Ricarte Batista1,2, Maria S Cirilo-Sousa1,2.
Abstract
This study systematically reviewed the available scientific evidence pertaining to the acute and chronic changes promoted by aerobic exercise (AE) combined with blood flow restriction (BFR) on neuromuscular, metabolic and hemodynamic variables. PubMed, Web of ScienceTM and Scopus databases were searched for the period from January 2000 to June 2019 and the analysis involved a critical content review. A total of 313 articles were identified, of which 271 were excluded and 35 satisfied the inclusion criteria. Twelve studies evaluated the acute effects and eight studies evaluated the chronic metabolic effects of AE + BFR. For the neuromuscular variables, three studies analyzed the acute effects of AE + BFR and nine studies analyzed the chronic effects. Only 15 studies were identified that evaluated the hemodynamic acute effects of AE + BFR. The analysis provided evidence that AE combined with BFR promotes positive acute and chronic changes in neuromuscular and metabolic variables, a greater elevation in hemodynamic variables than exercise alone, and a higher energy demand during and after exercise. Since these alterations were all well-tolerated, this method can be considered to be safe and feasible for populations of athletes, healthy young, obese, and elderly individuals.Entities:
Keywords: adults; aerobic exercise; blood flow restriction; elderly; hemodynamic
Year: 2019 PMID: 31636569 PMCID: PMC6787286 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2019.01239
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
Figure 1Flowchart of the study selection process.
Synthesis of the results of studies that evaluate the acute and chronic effects of combined aerobic exercise and blood flow restriction on metabolic variables in obese individuals, athletes and young adults.
| Abe et al., | 19 Elderly men and women | VO2max | WALK | TREADMILL | 67 m/min | 5× week/6 weeks | Continuous | 20 min | - | 200 | – | 5.0 | No improvement in VO2Max in the groups |
| Abe et al., | 19 Adult men | VO2max | CYC | CYCLE | – | 40% VO2 with and without BFR 1× day/3× week - 8 weeks | Continuous | 15 min with BFR | – | 160–210 | – | 5.0 | ↑ VO2Max in cycling with BFR |
| Park et al., | 12 Basketball players | VO2max
| WALK | TREADMILL | 4–6 km/h | 2× day/6× week | 5 Series | 3 min | 1 min | 160–230 | Yes | – | ↑VEmax and VO2max in training protocol with BFR |
| Ozaki et al., | 10 Men | VO2 (L/min) | CYC | CYCLE | 70 rpm | 20–40–60% VO2max with and without BFR | Continuous | 4 min each stage | – | 200 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑VO2 between 20 and 60% in the session with BFR |
| Loenneke et al., | 10 Men and women | EE and VO2 (L/min) | WALK | TREADMILL | 75 m/min | AE + BFR | 5 sets | 2 min | 1 min | Elastic | Yes | 7.6 | ↑VO2 and EE in the exercise session with BFR |
| Loenneke et al., | 9 Men and women | [La+] | WALK | TREADMILL | 75 m/min | AE + BFR | 5 sets | 2 min | 1 min | Elastic | Yes | 7.6 | WALKING+BFR does not change metabolic stress |
| Mendonca et al., | 18 Healthy men | Energy expenditure | WALK | TREADMILL | – | <30%VO2max | 5 sets | 3 min | 1 min | 200 | Yes | 6 × 83 | Energy expenditure > for walking with BFR |
| Corvino et al., | 13 Active subjects | TTE | CYC | CYCLE | – | 30% Pmax + BFR | 2 Set | 5–8 Repetitions | 1 min | 140–200 | Yes | 18 | ↑ in TTE for walking with BFR |
| Mendonca et al., | 17 Young men | EPOC | WALK | TREADMILL | – | <30%VO2Max | 5 Sets | 3 min | 1 min | 200 | Yes | 6 × 83 | EPOC> in exercise session with BFR |
| de Oliveira et al., | 37 Subjects | Pmax. PALS, VO2Max | CYC | CYCLE | – | 30% Pmax + BFR110% Pmax30% Pmax110%-30% Pmax +BFR3x week/4 weeks | 2 Sets | 5–8 Repetitions | 5 min | 140–200 | Yes | 18 | ↑VO2Max and Pmax and improvement in PALS for the LI with BFR protocol |
| Karabulut and Garcia, | 34 Obese men and women | EE, RER | CYC | CYCLE | 50 rpm | 40%+BFR | 2 Sets | 10 min | 1 min | 40% | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ EE and RER > in the BFR protocol |
| Taylor et al., | 20 Trained men | VO2Max | RUN | TREADMILL | – | SIT + BFR | 4, 5, 6. and 7 sprints | 30 s | 270 s | 130 post-exercise | No | 6 × 83 | ↑VO2Max for the protocol with BFR |
| Kim et al., | 31 Trained | VO2Max | CYC | BICYCLE | – | 3× week/6 weeks | Continuous | 20 min | – | 160–180 | Yes | 5.0 | VO2MAX did not increase in the LI group. |
| Corvino et al., | 12 Men | VO2, [La], VE | CYC | CYCLE | – | HI | 2 Sets with 5 reps | 2 | 1 | 80% | No | 18 | ↑ metabolic strain and muscle deoxigenation in protocol I-BFR30 |
| Paton et al., | 10 men 6 women | RE, TTE and PRV | RUN | TREADMILL | 80%PRV | AE + BFRCON 2× week/4 weeks | 2 Sets | 5 repetitions | 30 sec | Elastic | Yes | 7–10 | ↑ RE, TTE and PRV in protocol with BFR |
| Conceição et al., | 12 Men | TEE, ALM, AM, VE | CYC | CYCLE | 60–70 rpm | 40% VO2Max + BFR | Continuous | 30 min | – | 80% | No | 18 | ↑ metabolic anaerobic, aerobic, total energy expenditure and Ventilation in protocol AE + BFR |
| Thomas et al., | 18 Men | VO2 and [La] | CYC | CYCLE | – | HI 85%Pmax | 3 Sets | 2 min | 2 min active | 80% | Yes | 10 | ↑VO2, [La] in protocol HI > LI+BFR and LI. |
| Tanaka and Takarada, | 30 Elderly men | VO2Max | CYC | CYCLE | – | 40–70%VO2Max + BFR | Continuous | 15 min | – | 40–80 mmhg ↑ SBP | No | 9 × 7 | ↑ VO2Max in protocol AE + BFR |
| Silva et al., | 22 Men | VO2 | RUN | TREADMILL | – | HIIE | 6 Sets | 90 s | 90 s active | 50% | No | 18 | ↑VO2 in protocol HIIE |
| Pfeiffer et al., | 24 Men | EE | WALK | TREADMILL | – | 40% Maximal Speed | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 0 | Yes | 18 | ↑EE in protocol walk with 50% BFR |
BFR, blood flow restriction; VO.
Synthesis of the results of studies that evaluate the acute effect of combined aerobic exercise and blood flow restriction on neuromuscular variables in young adult and elderly subjects.
| Abe et al., | 18 Men healthy | GH, MH, FM | WALK | TREADMILL | 50 m/min | 2× day/6× week/weeks | 5 Sets | 2 | 1 min | 120–200 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑GH, MH and MS for the group with BFR compared to CG |
| Abe et al., | 19 Elderly men and women | MS, MH, FC | WALK | TREADMILL | 67 m/min | 5× weeks/6 weeks | Continuous | 20 min | – | 160–200 | Yes | - | ↑ MS, MH, HR in the group with BFR compared to CON |
| Abe et al., | 19 Young men | HM | CYC | CYCLE | – | 40% VO2max 3× week/8 weeks | Continuous | 15 min with BFR | – | 160–210 | Yes | - | ↑ TM in the group with BFR |
| Ozaki et al., | 23 Sedentary men and women | MH, FM | WALK | TREADMILL | – | 40% HRmax /4× week/10 weeks | Continuous | 20 min | – | 120–200 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ Strength and muscular hypertrophy in the group with BFR |
| Sakamaki et al., | 17 Healthy men | MH | WALK | TREADMILL | 50 m/min | 2× day/6× week/3 weeks | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 160–230 | Yes | – | ↑ in muscle area in the group with BFR |
| Keramidas et al., | 20 Young men and women | Muscular Adaptation | CYC | CYCLE | – | 3× week/6 weeks | 3 Sets | 2 min/2 min/6 min | – | 90 | No | – | BFR training induces peripheral muscle adaptation |
| Ozaki et al., | 6 Healthy men | ERK1/2, MTOR, P38. MAPK, AkT, S6K1 | WALK | TREADMILL | 100 m/min | WALK + BFR | Continuous | 20 min | – | 240 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ Activation of intracellular signaling pathways |
| Kim et al., | 10 Men | Muscular activation | CYC | CYCLE | 50–60 rpm | HI VO2max
| Continuous | HI−14 minLI + 40%BFR−28 minLI + 60%BFR- 30 min | – | 50–210 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ muscle strees with high intensity exercise |
| de Oliveira et al., | 37 young adults | MS | CYC | CYCLE | – | 3× week/4 weeks | 2 Sets of 5 to 8 reps | 2 min | 1 min/reps and 5 min/sets | 140–200 | No | 18 | ↑ of MS in the group with BFR |
| Ozaki et al., | 7 Elderly men | GH and MH | WALK | TREADMILL | – | 45% HRres with and without BFR | Continuous | 20 min | – | 50–200 | 5.0 | No correlation between GH and MH. | |
| Kim et al., | 31 Healthy men | MS, MH | CYC | CYCLE | – | 3× week/6 weeks | Continuous | 20 min | – | 120–180 | Yes | – | No difference between groups |
| Clarkson et al., | 19 Men and women | FC | WALK | CIRCUIT | 4 km/h | 4× week/6 weeks | Continuous | 10 min | – | 60% of BFR max | Yes | 10.5 | ↑ in FC in the group with BFR |
BFR, blood flow restriction; EX, exercise; FE, form of execution; VE, velocity of execution; WALK, walking; CYC, cycling; RUN, running; CYCLE, cycle ergometer; min, minutes; s, seconds; CON, Control; PADE, pressure applied during exercise; SW, sleeve width; –, Not informed; ↑, significant increase; LI + BFR, low intensity combined with blood flow restriction; LI, low intensity; HI, High intensity. GH, Growth Hormone; MDF, Maximum Dynamic Force; HR, Heart Rate; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; MAPK, Mitogen-activated protein kinase; GH, Growth Hormone; MH, Muscle hypertrophy; FC, Functional Capacity; MS, muscle strength; HI, High Intensity; REPS, Repetitions.
Synthesis of the results of studies that evaluate the acute effect of combined aerobic exercise and blood flow restriction on hemodynamic variables in athletes, young adults, and elderly individuals.
| Abe et al., | 18 Healthy youth | HR | WALK | TREADMILL | 50 m/min | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 120–220 | Yes | - | ↑ HR during protocol with BFR | |
| Abe et al., | 19 Young men | HR | CYC | CYCLE | 50 m/min | 40% VO2maxBFR | Continuous | 15 min with BFR | – | 160–210 | – | 5.0 | ↑ HR in protocol with BFR |
| Renzi et al., | 17 men and women adults | HR, CO, DP and SBP | WALK | TREADMILL | 3.21 Km/h | – | 5-Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 160 | Yes | – | ↑ HR, BP and DP and ↓ SV during training with BFR |
| Ozaki et al., | 10 Men | HR, CO, SBP, DBP, MAP, SV | CYC | CYCLE | – | 0–20–40–60% VO2max with and without BFR | Continuous | 4 min each stage | – | 200 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑HR, CO, SBP, DBP, MAP and ↓ VEJ in training with BFR |
| Loenneke et al., | 10 Men and women | HR | WALK | TREADMILL | 75 m/min | – | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | Elastic | Yes | 7.6 | ↑HR in the exercise session with BFR |
| Kumagai et al., | 8 Men | HR, SBP, DBP, SV, BP, CO, TPR | CYC | BICYCLE | – | 40% VO2max with and without BFR | Continuous | 30 min | - | 200 | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ HR BFR and CON |
| Karabulut and Garcia, | 34 Obese men and women | HR, SBP, DBP | CYC | CYCLE | 50 rpm | 40% + BFR | 2 Sets | 10 min | 1 min | 40%60% | Yes | 5.0 | ↑ > HR and SBP in BFR protocols |
| Sugawara et al., | 15 Adult men and women | HR, SBP, DBP, SV, CO, TPR | WALK | TREADMILL | 3.21 Km/h | WALK + BFR | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 160 | Yes | – | ↑ > HR, SBP in protocol with BFR. SV and TPR is > for the control |
| Ferreira et al., | 21 Elderly men and women | HR, SBP, DBP, DP, SV, TPR, CO | WALK | TREADMILL | – | 40% VO2maxBFR | Continuous | 20 min | – | 50% | Yes | 17.5 | ↑ HR and SBP in protocols BFR. DP in the protocol HI > LI and LI+BFR |
| Cirilo-Sousa et al., | 13 Men | HR, SBP, DBP | RUN | STATIONARY | – | 50% HRMáx+BFR | 5 Sets | 2 min | 1 min | 80% | No | 18 | ↑ HR, SBP and DBP in protocol with BFR |
| Conceição et al., | 12 Men | HR | CYC | CYCLE | 60–70 rpm | 40% VO2Max + BFR | Continuous | 30 min | – | 80% | No | 18 | ↑ HR in protocol AE+BFR |
| Thomas et al., | 18 Men | BP, HR, CO | CYC | CYCLE | – | HI | 3 Sets | 2 min | 2 min active | 80% | Yes | 10 | ↑BP, HR, CO in protocol HI > LI + BFR and LI |
| Barilli et al., | 18 Elderly women | HR, SBP, DBP | WALK | TREADMILL | HIAE | Continuous | – | – | 130% SBP rest | Yes | 9.5 | HR, SBP, and DPB in protocol HIAE = LI + BFR | |
| Silva et al., | 23 Men | HR, SBP, DBP | RUN | TREADMILL | HIIE | 6 sets continuous | 90 s | 90 s active- | 50% | No | 18 | ↓ SBP, DPB in protocol HIIE and AE + BFR | |
| Silva et al., | 22 Men | HR | RUNWALK | TREADMILL | HIIE | 6 set | 90 s | 90 s active | 50% | No | 18 | ↑HR in protocol HIIE | |
BFR, blood flow restriction; HR, heart rate; BP, blood pressure; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; TPR, total peripheral resistance; CO, cardiac output; SV, stroke volume; DP, double product; EX, exercise; FE, form of exercise; VE, velocity of exercise; RPM, rotations per minute; WALK, walking; CYC, cycling; RUN, running; CYCLE, cycle ergometer; min, minutes; s, seconds; CON, Control; PADE, pressure applied during exercise; SW, sleeve width; –, Not informed; ↑, significant increase; LI + BFR, low intensity combined with blood flow restriction; LI, low intensity; HI, high intensity.