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Vol. 28. Núm. S1.
1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)
(01 Abril 2024)
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Vol. 28. Núm. S1.
1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)
(01 Abril 2024)
156
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ISOKINETIC EVALUATION OF MUSCULAR STRENGTH AFTER DIFFERENT ISCHEMIC PRECONDITIONING PRESSURES: A PLACEBO-CONTROLLED RANDOMIZED CLINICAL TRIAL
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Guilherme Henrique da Silva Brandão1, Carlos Alberto Toledo Teixeira Filho1, Taíse Mendes Biral1, Flávia Alves de Carvalho1, Eduardo Pizzo Junior1, Franciele Marques Vanderlei1
1 Department of Physical Therapy, Faculty of Science and Technology, São Paulo State University (FCT/UNESP), Presidente Prudente, São Paulo, Brazil
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Vol. 28. Núm S1

1st STUDENT SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE OF THE BRAZILIAN ASSOCIATION FOR RESEARCH AND POSTGRADUATE IN PHYSIOTHERAPY (ABRAPG-FT)

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Background

Ischemic preconditioning (IPC) is characterized as a procedure consisting of intermittent applications of cycles of non-lethal and short-duration vascular occlusion in a target limb, followed by reperfusion through inflation and deflation of a pressure cuff. Because it is a method of easy administration, usability, non-invasive, and low cost, it currently presents as an attractive ergogenic resource that has been used for performance enhancement. Despite its notoriety in the literature in recent years, there are gaps regarding the most efficient protocol to be used to obtain significant results, especially for increasing muscular strength.

Objectives

to compare the effect of different IPC occlusion pressures on muscular strength through maximum voluntary isometric contraction (MVIC).

Methods

eighty healthy men (22.10±2.86 years) were randomly divided into four groups: IPC using total occlusion pressure (TOP) [IPC-TOP], IPC with 40% more than TOP (IPC-40%), placebo (10 mmHg), and control. The IPC protocol used consisted of four cycles of ischemia and reperfusion of five minutes each, totaling 40 minutes, while the placebo underwent an intervention like IPC but with four cycles of five minutes of placebo occlusion (10mmHg) alternated with four cycles of five minutes of reperfusion (0 mmHg). In the control group, individuals remained at rest for 40 minutes. Initially, TOP evaluation was performed, followed by baseline evaluation of MVIC on an isokinetic dynamometer. Next, participants underwent the previously randomized intervention protocol. Finally, MVIC evaluation was performed again. Descriptive statistical methods and analysis of variance for repeated measures were used with a significance level of 5%.

Results

all analyzed groups showed a significant difference in the final evaluation compared to the baseline (p<0.05), where the levels of muscular strength decreased. Regarding the magnitude of the losses, it was observed that the IPC-40% group (Δ = -14.01Nm) presented the lowest reduction, which was statistically significant compared to the control, placebo, and IPC-TOP groups (Δ = -29.46Nm; -32.71Nm and -26.44Nm, respectively).

Conclusion

IPC with 40% more than the TOP was able to attenuate the reduction of muscular strength evaluated by the MVIC.

Implications

the present study brings important results providing an alternative technique that can be used in training and competition routines to minimize the loss of muscular strength.

Keywords:
Vascular occlusion
Muscular strength
Functional physical performance
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Conflict of interest: The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Acknowledgment: case number 2022/14414-0, São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP).

Ethics committee approval: The study was approved by the Research Ethics Committee of FCT/UNESP, Presidente Prudente, SP, Brazil (CAAE: 30765020.3.0000.5402).

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Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy
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