| Literature DB >> 33037592 |
Bastien Bontemps1,2, Fabrice Vercruyssen1, Mathieu Gruet1, Julien Louis3.
Abstract
Downhill running (DR) is a whole-body exercise model that is used to investigate the physiological consequences of eccentric muscle actions and/or exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD). In a sporting context, DR sections can be part of running disciplines (off-road and road running) and can accentuate EIMD, leading to a reduction in performance. The purpose of this narrative review is to: (1) better inform on the acute and delayed physiological effects of DR; (2) identify and discuss, using a comprehensive approach, the DR characteristics that affect the physiological responses to DR and their potential interactions; (3) provide the current state of evidence on preventive and in-situ strategies to better adapt to DR. Key findings of this review show that DR may have an impact on exercise performance by altering muscle structure and function due to EIMD. In the majority of studies, EIMD are assessed through isometric maximal voluntary contraction, blood creatine kinase and delayed onset muscle soreness, with DR characteristics (slope, exercise duration, and running speed) acting as the main influencing factors. In previous studies, the median (25th percentile, Q1; 75th percentile, Q3) slope, exercise duration, and running speed were - 12% (- 15%; - 10%), 40 min (30 min; 45 min) and 11.3 km h-1 (9.8 km h-1; 12.9 km h-1), respectively. Regardless of DR characteristics, people the least accustomed to DR generally experienced the most EIMD. There is growing evidence to suggest that preventive strategies that consist of prior exposure to DR are the most effective to better tolerate DR. The effectiveness of in-situ strategies such as lower limb compression garments and specific footwear remains to be confirmed. Our review finally highlights important discrepancies between studies in the assessment of EIMD, DR protocols and populations, which prevent drawing firm conclusions on factors that most influence the response to DR, and adaptive strategies to DR.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33037592 PMCID: PMC7674385 DOI: 10.1007/s40279-020-01355-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports Med ISSN: 0112-1642 Impact factor: 11.136
Fig. 1a Decrease (% from baseline) in isometric maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) torque of knee extensors after downhill running (DR); b increase (% from baseline) in blood (plasma and serum) creatine kinase (CK) concentration after DR; c delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) response (0–100 mm evaluated on visual analogue scale) for knee extensors after DR. Based on data from original research articles reporting isometric MVC force/torque decrements (n = 37; [5, 9, 10, 15, 38, 43, 58–87]), blood CK elevation (n = 83; [14, 16, 38, 40–42, 44, 46, 50, 59–62, 65–67, 70, 72–75, 77, 80, 81, 84, 85, 87–90, 92, 121, 134–183]) and DOMS (n = 23; [8, 15, 38, 58, 60, 66, 71, 75, 84, 89, 135, 151, 156, 159, 171, 178, 179, 182, 184–188]) responses immediately post-, 24 h post-, 48 h post-, 72 h post- and 96 h post-DR. In all panels, circles and bars refer to individual and mean data, respectively, in white and black for untrained (i.e. healthy and/or recreationally active) and trained populations (i.e. > 54–60 ml min kg−1 and were involved in endurance-based activities at least 3 times/week), respectively. In the cases where data were not fully presented in the manuscript, data were extracted from original figures using ImageJ software (ImageJ V.1.45 s, National Institute of Health, MD, USA)
Fig. 2Relationships between peak changes in indirect markers of exercise-induced muscle damage (i.e. isometric maximal voluntary contraction, MVC; blood (plasma and serum) creatine kinase, CK; and delayed onset muscle soreness, DOMS) and downhill running (DR) characteristics (i.e. slope (a–c), running speed (d–f) and exercise duration (g–i)]. All data presented and DR characteristics were extracted from original articles. Peak MVC force/torque decrement was reported immediately post-DR. Peak changes in blood CK and DOMS were reported between 24-h post and 48-h post DR. White and black circles refer to original data from untrained (i.e. healthy and/or recreationally active) and trained populations (i.e. > 54−60 ml min kg−1 and were involved in endurance-based activities at least 3 times/week), respectively. In each panel, the grey shape highlights the slope, running speed or exercise duration used in the majority of studies (ranging between the 25th and 75th percentile). In the cases where data were not fully presented in the manuscript, data were extracted from original figures using ImageJ software (ImageJ V.1.45 s, National Institute of Health, MD, USA)
Summary of studies examining adaptation strategies to downhill running (DR), i.e. prior exposure to DR, preconditioning strategies, DR training, changes in stride pattern, the use of lower-limb compression garments and the use of specific footwear
| Study | Participants | Downhill run | Interventions | Main outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duration | Intensity | Slope (%) | ||||
| Prior exposure to DR | ||||||
| Byrnes et al. [ | College students ( | 30 min | Speed corresponding to 170 bpm recorded on level grade | − 17.6 | Bout 2 post 3, 6 or 9 weeks | + DOMS post 3 and 6 weeks + Blood CK and Mb post 3 and 6 weeks ↔ DOMS and plasma CK post 9 weeks |
| Pierrynowski et al. | Healthy male students ( | 3 × 4 min, | 60% | − 10 | Bout 2 post 4 days | + DOMS ↔ MVC torque of KE and knee flexors (concentric muscle actions) |
| Westerlind et al. | Recreational active adults ( | 30 min | 40% | − 10 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation + |
| Westerlind et al. [ | Recreational active adults ( | 45 min | 50% | − 10 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation ↔ ↔ Muscle and rectal temperature ↔ Stride length and frequency |
| Smith et al. [ | Active male adults ( | 3 × 15 min, | 70% s | − 16.2 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation ↔ Neutrophil count during the post 12-h |
| Eston et al. [ | Active adults ( | 5 × 8 min, | 11.3 km h−1 | − 12 | Bout 2 post 5-weeks at − 8% PSF, + 8% PSF or PSF | + Blood CK elevation + Muscle tenderness ↔ MVC torque decrement of KE ↔ Gender effect |
| Rowlands et al. [ | Active male students ( | 9 × 5 min, | 10.5 km h−1 | − 15 | Bout 1 at − 8% PSF, PSF or + 8% PSF Bout 2 post 2 weeks at PSF | + DOMS + MVC force decrements of KE (PSF and + 8% PSF) ↔ MVC force decrement of KE (− 8% PSF) |
| McKune et al. [ | Healthy male adults ( | 60 min | 75% s | − 13.5 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + Blood CK elevation + Inflammatory response (e.g. higher clearance) |
| Chen et al. [ | Healthy male students ( | 30 min | 70% | − 15 | Bout 2 post 5 days | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation + RE changes (expressed as ↔ MVC torque decrement |
| Smith et al. [ | Active male adults ( | 60 min | 75% s | − 13.5 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + Blood CK elevation + DOMS + Systemic inflammation |
| Smith et al. [ | Healthy male adults ( | 60 min | 75% s | − 13.5 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + Blood CK elevation + DOMS ↔ Neutrophil count during the post 24-h |
| Green et al. [ | Recreational adult female athletes ( | 6 × 5 min, | 13 km h−1 | − 12 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | ↔ Faster recovery of MVC torque of KE ↔ Blood CK elevation ↔ DOMS ↔ Insulin and glucose response |
| Park et al. [ | Moderately trained adults ( | 40 min | 70% | − 10 | Bout 2 post 3 weeks | + Blood CK elevation + Apoptic response |
| Park and Lee [ | Moderately trained male adults ( | 40 min | 70% | – 10 | Bout 2 post 3 weeks | + Blood CK elevation + Oxidative stress |
| He et al. [ | Moderately trained males ( | 40 min | 65–70% | – 10 | Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation |
| Dolci et al. [ | Physically active males ( | 60 min | 65% | − 10 | Bout 1 and 2 followed by 40-min HS level running. Bout 2 post 2 weeks | + MVC torque decrement of KE + DOMS + Physiological strain (e.g. rectal temperature) during subsequent HS exercise + Perceived exertion and thermal sensation during subsequent HS exercise |
| Tuttle et al. [ | Physically active males ( | 30 min | Lactate threshold (66% | − 10 | Bout 1 and 2 in HS condition Bout 2 post 1 week | + DOMS + Physiological strain (e.g. rectal temperature) + Cellular stress response and thermotolerance |
| Preconditioning strategies | ||||||
| Eston et al. [ | Healthy male students ( | 5 × 8 min, | 80% HRmax | − 10 | 100 KE maximal eccentric contractions 2 weeks prior DR | + Blood CK elevation + DOMS + MVC torque of KE (concentric and eccentric muscle actions) ↔ Muscle tenderness |
| Lima et al. [ | Young males ( | 30 min | 70% | − 15 | 10 KE isometric MVCs 2-day prior DR | + Faster recovery of KE MVC torque + DOMS + Blood CK elevation ↔ |
| Downhill running training | ||||||
| Schwane et al. [ | Healthy adults ( | 9 × 5 min, | 80% s | − 10 | 5 sessions/week for 1 or 2 weeks | + DOMS (especially with 2-weeks training) + Blood CK elevation |
| Law et al. [ | Military young males ( | 30 min | 50-60% | − 10 | 1 session/week for 8 weeks | + DOMS + Blood CK elevation |
| Shaw et al. [ | Highly trained male adults ( | 15–45 min (divided into 3 different intensity stages) | 90, 100 and 110% speed at lactate turn point | − 5 | 2 sessions/week for 8 weeks in addition to their habitual training program | ↔ Velocity at lactate turn point ↔ RE improvement (expressed as energy cost) |
| Toyomura et al. [ | Healthy male adults ( | 5–20 min | At lactate threshold (14.9 km h−1 on average) | − 10 | 3 sessions/week for 5 weeks | + MVC torque of KE (isometric, concentric and eccentric muscle actions) + Change of direction ability + Little effect on the aerobic capacity |
| Change in stride pattern | ||||||
| Eston et al. [ | Active adults ( | 5 × 8 min, | 11.3 km h−1 | − 12 | Bout 1 at PSF, Bout 2 post 5 weeks, at − 8% PSF, PSF or + 8% PSF | ↔ Muscle tenderness ↔ Blood CK elevation ↔ MVC force decrement of KE |
| Rowlands et al. [ | Active male students ( | 9 × 5 min, | 10.5 km h−1 | − 15 | Bout 1 at − 8% PSF, PSF or + 8% PSF, Bout 2 post 2 weeks, at PSF | − DOMS (overstride–Bout 1) + MVC force/torque of KE (understride–Bout 1) + Greater RBE with overstride (especially for DOMS) |
| Snyder and Farley [ | Male adult runners ( | 5 min, | 7.3 km h−1 | − 5.2 | At PSF, 85% PSF, 92% PSF, 108% PSF and 115% PSF | ↔ RE (expressed as net metabolic cost) |
| Sheehan and Gottschall [ | Healthy young adults ( | 2 × 5 min | 10.8 km h−1 | − 10.5 | At PSF, + 15% PSF and − 15% PSF | − RE at + 15% PSF and − 15% PSF (expressed as |
| Giandolini et al. [ | Male adults trained in trail running ( | 6.5 km | As fast as possible (13.3 km h−1 on average over analysed sections) | − 16.8 on average | Anterior vs. posterior FSP | FSP differently affects the components of impact shock acceleration: ↔ Adopting a more anterior FSP leads to improve attenuation of axial and resultant impact-related frequencies |
| Giandolini et al. [ | Male adults trained in trail running ( | 6.5 km | As fast as possible (13.3km h-−1 on average over analysed sections) | − 16.8 on average | Anterior vs. posterior FSP | Anterior FSP: − MVC torque decrement in KE − Peripheral component of neuromuscular fatigue in KE High FSP variability: + MVC torque decrement of KE and PF + Peripheral component of neuromuscular fatigue of KE |
| Vincent et al. [ | Experienced adult runners ( | 40-min (including warm-up, 6 trials and a cool-down) | 10.6 km h−1 on average | − 10.5 | DR trials at PSF, + 10% PSF, + 5% PSF, − 5% PSF and –− 10% PSF | + ± 5% PSF: energy conservation and protection of lower extremity joints − Extended periods at − 10% PSF: may increase relative intensity of running, loading impulses and force attenuation by lower extremities |
| Vernillo et al. [ | Male adults experienced in trail running ( | 2.5-h graded run (with 3 × 20min DR) | As fast as possible over the graded run (9.5 km h−1 on average) | − 15 | Manipulation of FSP (every 30-s during DR) | ↔ Extent of biomechanical changes ↔ Neuromuscular fatigue component ↔ Energy cost drift |
| Baggaley et al. [ | Active adults ( | < 15 s | 11.9 km h−1 | − 8.8 and − 17.6 | At PSF, + 10% PSF, and − 10% PSF | PSF manipulation: + Lower extremity energy absorption + Impact attenuation + Shorter PSF: reduce the demand placed on the knee and hip, and may aid in reducing EIMD and improving performance − Longer PSF: greater energy absorption |
| Use of lower-limb compression garments | ||||||
| Webb and Willems [ | Healthy male adults ( | 5 × 8 min, | 80% | − 10 | Average compression rate of 18mmHg at the calf and 9mm Hg at the thigh | + DOMS at post-24 h and 48 h + Jump height recovery |
| Valle et al. [ | Male adult amateur soccer players ( | 40 min | 73% | − 10 | Smallest size of garment participants could wear | + − 26.7% EIMD (presence of albumin in muscle fibres) |
| Ehrström et al. [ | Male adults well-trained in trail running ( | 40 min | 55% | − 15 | Average compression rate of 18 mmHg to the calf and 21 mm Hg at the thigh | + Attenuation of KE soft-tissue vibration + Neuromuscular fatigue component and recovery + MVC torque decrements in KE and recovery + DOMS ↔ RE (expressed as |
| Use of specific running footwear | ||||||
| Hardin and Hamill [ | Adult male recreational runners ( | 30 min | 12.2 km h−1 | − 12 | Soft vs medium vs hard midsole shoes | ↔ Leg shock ↔ Haematological responses |
| Lussiana et al. [ | Adult male recreational runners ( | 7 × 5 min (DR, level and uphill), | 10 km h−1 | –8, −5 and − 2 for DR | Minimal shoes vs traditional shoes | + RE (expressed as cost of running) when all slopes are considered ↔ RE (expressed as cost of running) for negative slopes only |
| Lussiana et al. [ | Adult male recreational runners ( | 7 × 5 min, | 10 km h−1 | − 8 | Minimal shoes vs traditional shoes | + With minimalist shoes: leg compression, contact time, vertical displacement of the centre of mass (vertical and horizontal leg stiffness respond differently to change in footwear) |
| Chan et al. [ | Adult regular distance runners ( | 5 min | 8.3 km h−1 on average | − 10 | Maximalist shoes vs traditional running shoes | − With maximalist shoes might not reduce the external impact loading. Instead, it may increase the external impact loading during DR |
DOMS, delayed onset muscle soreness; EIMD, exercise-induced muscle damage; FSP, foot stride pattern; HS, heat stress (30° C); KE, knee extensors; MVC, maximal voluntary contraction (isometric muscle actions unless otherwise stated); PSF, preferred stride frequency; RBE, repeat bout effect; RE, running economy; r’, recovery duration; , maximal aerobic capacity measured on level grade unless otherwise stated; s, running speed associated with ; + , positive effect; −, negative effect; ↔ , no effect
Fig. 3a Schematic representation of the time course of alterations following downhill running (DR) and b current scientific evidence on the benefits of different adaptation strategies to DR (i.e. prior exposure to DR [46, 63, 67, 68, 85, 92, 121, 141, 143, 165, 181, 184, 185, 192, 193, 196, 197], preconditioning strategies [16, 81], DR training [14, 209, 210, 254], changes in stride pattern [32, 67, 68, 218, 219, 221, 220, 228, 255], the use of lower limb compression garments [15, 236, 237], and the use of specific footwear [28, 149, 253, 256]. In a and b, orange, blue, red, purple, and green spheres correspond to isometric MVC force/torque loss, changes in running economy and mechanics, ultrastructural alterations, inflammation and oedema, and muscle soreness, respectively. In b, full sphere, indicates a high tendency for a beneficial effect; half full sphere, indicates a lack of tendency for a beneficial effect and/or lack of studies for this parameter; empty sphere, indicates no data for this parameter. In b for each strategy, the strength of scientific evidence is represented with stars on a 1–3 scale where 1 meaning little evidence and 3 meaning high evidence. The level of evidence was determined according to the abundance of data available and the number of studies reporting the same outcome. The illustration of the running man is adapted from ©maximmmmum/Adobe Stock
| Due to its eccentric nature, downhill running (DR) induces lower limb muscle damage, manifested by alterations in muscle structure, muscle function, and ensuing running performance for up to several days after exercise. |
| Manipulating DR characteristics (slope, running speed, and duration), independently or not, can influence the extent of exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD). Although trained and/or accustomed people generally experience less muscle damage following DR, it is still unknown if sex and/or age may influence the adaptation to DR. |
| Scientific evidence suggests preventive strategies that consist of prior exposure to DR to limit the extent of muscle damage induced by DR. |
| Evidence is lacking to support the use of in-situ strategies such as compression garments, specific footwear, or modification in running stride to limit muscle damage induced by DR, which highlights the need for further high-quality research. |