| Literature DB >> 35256919 |
Onat Çetin1, Zeki Akyildiz2, Barbaros Demirtaş3, Yılmaz Sungur4,5, Filipe Manuel Clemente6,7,8, Florin Cazan9, Luca Paolo Ardigò10.
Abstract
This study aimed at examining the concurrent validity and reliability of the multi-point method and the two-point method's variations for estimating the one-repetition maximum (1RM) in the deadlift and squat exercises and to determine the accuracy of which optimal two loads can be used for the two-point method protocol. Thirteen resistance-trained men performed six sessions that consisted of two incremental loading tests (multi-point method: 20-40-60-80-90% and two-point method variations: 40-60%, 40-80%, 40-90%,60-80%, 60-90%) followed by 1RM tests. Both the multi-point method and the two-point method load variations showed reliable results for 1RM estimation (CV < 10%) squat and deadlift exercises. Session-session reliability was found to be low in deadlift (ICC: 0.171-0.335) and squat exercises (ICC: 0.235-0.479) of 40-60% and 60-80% in two-point methods. Deadlift (ICC: 0.815-0.996) and squat (ICC: 0.817-0.988) had high session-to-session reliability in all other methods. Regarding the validity of deadlift exercise, the multipoint method (R2 = 0.864) and two variations of the two-point method (R2 = 0.816 for 40-80%, R2 = 0.732 for 60-80%) showed very large correlations, whereas other two variations of the two-point method (R2 = 0.945 for 40-90%, R2 = 0.914 for 60-90%) showed almost perfect correlations with the actual 1RM. Regarding the validity of squat exercise, the multi-point method (R2 = 0.773) and two variations of the two-point method (R2 = 0.0847 for 60-80%, R2 = 0.705 for 40-90%) showed very large correlations, whereas 40-60% variation showed almost perfect correlation (R2 = 0.962) with the actual 1RM. In conclusion, whereas both the multi-point method and the two-point method load variations showed reliable results, the multiple-point method and most of the two-point methods' load variations examined in this research provided an accurate (from large-moderate to perfect) estimate of the 1RM. Therefore, we recommend using the multi-point method and especially the two-point methods variations including higher relative loads to estimate 1RM.Entities:
Keywords: Load-velocity relationship; Multipoint method; Two-point method; Velocity-based training
Year: 2022 PMID: 35256919 PMCID: PMC8898007 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.13013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in deadlift exercise.
| Tukey’s multiple comparisons test | Mean difference | 95% CI of difference | Mean absolute error | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deadlift real RM | −3.16 | [−48.13 to 41.81] | >0.9999 | 7.057 |
| Deadlift real RM | −47.59 | [−92.56 to −2.62] | 0.0305 | 52.583 |
| Deadlift real RM | −12.28 | [−57.24 to 32.69] | 0.9830 | 12.911 |
| Deadlift real RM | −2.995 | [−47.96 to 41.97] | >0.9999 | 5.556 |
| Deadlift real RM | −8.23 | [−53.20 to 36.74] | 0.9981 | 11.775 |
| Deadlift real RM | −2.97 | [−47.93 to 42.00] | >0.9999 | 6.78 |
Note:
p < 0.05.
Inter-session reliability of the data obtained from the load-velocity profile in the deadlift exercise.
| Measurement methods | CV% | SWC | ICC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deadlift multiple method | 4.93 | 4.73 | 0.996 |
| Deadlift 40–60% | 7.72 | 7.38 | 0.171 |
| Deadlift 40–80% | 4.23 | 3.40 | 0.815 |
| Deadlift 40–90% | 4.27 | 3.20 | 0.996 |
| Deadlift 60–80% | 3.86 | 2.65 | 0.335 |
| Deadlift 60–90% | 4.62 | 3.53 | 0.972 |
Differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in squat exercise.
| Tukey’s multiple comparisons test | Mean difference | 95% CI of difference | Mean absolute error | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Squat real RM | −14.95 | [−73.43 to 43.53] | 0.9879 | 20.211 |
| Squat real RM | −35.12 | [−93.60 to 23.36] | 0.5535 | 47.075 |
| Squat real RM | −23.70 | [−82.18 to 34.78] | 0.8889 | 33.335 |
| Squat real RM | −9.223 | [–67.70 to 49.26] | 0.9992 | 18.668 |
| Squat real RM | −43.58 | [−102.1 to 14.90] | 0.2874 | 61.294 |
| Squat real RM | −7.31 | [–65.79 to 51.17] | 0.9998 | 16.693 |
Inter-session reliability of the data obtained from the load-velocity profile in the squat exercise.
| Measurement methods | CV% | SWC | ICC |
|---|---|---|---|
| Squat multiple method | 4.42 | 4.72 | 0.817 |
| Squat 40–60% | 6.26 | 6.66 | 0.235 |
| Squat 40–80% | 4.07 | 4.40 | 0.822 |
| Squat 40–90% | 4.34 | 4.60 | 0.905 |
| Squat 60–80% | 9.81 | 10.25 | 0.479 |
| Squat 60–90% | 4.50 | 4.74 | 0.988 |
Figure 1Differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in deadlift exercise.
Figure 2Differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in squat exercise.
Figure 3Relationships of data derived from the load velocity profile in deadlift exercise between methods.
Figure 4Relationships of data derived from the load velocity profile in squat exercise between methods.
Figure 5Bland-Altman plot showing the differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in deadlift exercise.
Figure 6Bland-Altman plot showing the differences between methods of data derived from the load velocity profile in squat exercise.