A Review on the Mechanisms of Blood-Flow Restriction Resistance Training-Induced Muscle Hypertrophy

被引:377
作者
Pearson, Stephen John [1 ]
Hussain, Syed Robiul [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Salford, Ctr Hlth Sport & Rehabil Sci Res, Manchester M6 6PU, Lancs, England
关键词
HUMAN SKELETAL-MUSCLE; SATELLITE CELL ACTIVATION; MESSENGER-RNA EXPRESSION; GROWTH-FACTOR RESPONSES; NITRIC-OXIDE SYNTHASE; PROTEIN-SYNTHESIS; METABOLIC STRESS; IGF-I; HORMONAL RESPONSES; VASCULAR OCCLUSION;
D O I
10.1007/s40279-014-0264-9
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
It has traditionally been believed that resistance training can only induce muscle growth when the exercise intensity is greater than 65 % of the 1-repetition maximum (RM). However, more recently, the use of low-intensity resistance exercise with blood-flow restriction (BFR) has challenged this theory and consistently shown that hypertrophic adaptations can be induced with much lower exercise intensities (<50 % 1-RM). Despite the potent hypertrophic effects of BFR resistance training being demonstrated by numerous studies, the underlying mechanisms responsible for such effects are not well defined. Metabolic stress has been suggested to be a primary factor responsible, and this is theorised to activate numerous other mechanisms, all of which are thought to induce muscle growth via autocrine and/or paracrine actions. However, it is noteworthy that some of these mechanisms do not appear to be mediated to any great extent by metabolic stress but rather by mechanical tension (another primary factor of muscle hypertrophy). Given that the level of mechanical tension is typically low with BFR resistance exercise (<50 % 1-RM), one may question the magnitude of involvement of these mechanisms aligned to the adaptations reported with BFR resistance training. However, despite the low level of mechanical tension, it is plausible that the effects induced by the primary factors (mechanical tension and metabolic stress) are, in fact, additive, which ultimately contributes to the adaptations seen with BFR resistance training. Exercise-induced mechanical tension and metabolic stress are theorised to signal a number of mechanisms for the induction of muscle growth, including increased fast-twitch fibre recruitment, mechanotransduction, muscle damage, systemic and localised hormone production, cell swelling, and the production of reactive oxygen species and its variants, including nitric oxide and heat shock proteins. However, the relative extent to which these specific mechanisms are induced by the primary factors with BFR resistance exercise, as well as their magnitude of involvement in BFR resistance training-induced muscle hypertrophy, requires further exploration.
引用
收藏
页码:187 / 200
页数:14
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