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65 results on '"*RESISTANCE training"'

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1. Cortical and spinal responses to short-term strength training and detraining in young and older adults in rectus femoris muscle.

2. Influence of 8-weeks of supervised static stretching or resistance training of pectoral major muscles on maximal strength, muscle thickness and range of motion.

3. Acute effects of caffeine or quercetin ingestion on motor unit firing pattern before and after resistance exercise.

4. Obesity blunts insulin sensitivity improvements and attenuates strength gains following resistance training in nondiabetic men.

5. Effects of hemp supplementation during resistance training in trained young adults.

6. Power-oriented resistance training combined with high-intensity interval training in pre-frail and frail older people: comparison between traditional and cluster training set configurations on the force–velocity relationship, physical function and frailty

7. Feasibility of vertical force–velocity profiles to monitor changes in muscle function following different fatigue protocols.

8. Effects of resistance exercise alone or with caffeine on hemodynamics, autonomic modulation and arterial stiffness in resistance-trained women.

9. The effect of four weeks blood flow restricted resistance training on macro- and micro-vascular function in healthy, young men.

10. Altitude-induced effects on neuromuscular, metabolic and perceptual responses before, during and after a high-intensity resistance training session.

11. Resistance exercise stress: theoretical mechanisms for growth hormone processing and release from the anterior pituitary somatotroph.

12. Enhanced skeletal muscle contractile function and corticospinal excitability precede strength and architectural adaptations during lower-limb resistance training.

13. Comparison of the effects of long-lasting static stretching and hypertrophy training on maximal strength, muscle thickness and flexibility in the plantar flexors.

14. Velocity loss is a flawed method for monitoring and prescribing resistance training volume with a free-weight back squat exercise.

15. Efficacy of progressive versus severe energy restriction on body composition and strength in concurrent trained women.

16. Muscle strength and activity in men and women performing maximal effort biceps curl exercise on a new machine that automates eccentric overload and drop setting.

17. Hip flexion angle affects longitudinal muscle activity of the rectus femoris in leg extension exercise.

18. The impact of leg position on muscle blood flow and oxygenation during low-intensity rhythmic plantarflexion exercise.

19. Dynamic resistance exercise-induced pressor response does not alter hypercapnia-induced cerebral vasodilation in young adults.

20. Effects of transdermal estrogen therapy on satellite cell number and molecular markers for muscle hypertrophy in response to resistance training in early postmenopausal women.

21. Acute changes in passive stiffness of the individual hamstring muscles induced by resistance exercise: effects of muscle length and exercise duration.

22. The effects of a caffeine containing pre-workout supplement on β2-adrenergic and MAPK signaling during resistance exercise.

23. Predictors of muscle hypertrophy responsiveness to electrically evoked resistance training after spinal cord injury.

24. Minimal adaptation of the molecular regulators of mitochondrial dynamics in response to unilateral limb immobilisation and retraining in middle-aged men.

25. Comparison between concentric-only, eccentric-only, and concentric–eccentric resistance training of the elbow flexors for their effects on muscle strength and hypertrophy.

26. The effect of aging on carotid artery wall mechanics during maximal resistance exercise.

27. Effects of whole body vibration in postmenopausal osteopenic women on bone mineral density, muscle strength, postural control and quality of life: the T-bone randomized trial.

28. Correction to: Resistance exercise stress: theoretical mechanisms for growth hormone processing and release from the anterior pituitary somatotroph.

29. Central arterial stiffness, wave reflection, and heart rate variability following 4-week high-intensity resistance training intervention in young active women.

30. Relationship between hypertrophy, strength gains and tensiomyography adaptations: a moderator role of contraction duration.

31. Maximal strength training in patients with inflammatory rheumatic disease: implications for physical function and quality of life.

32. Fast and ballistic contractions involve greater neuromuscular power production in older adults during resistance exercise.

33. Effect of watermelon supplementation on exercise performance, muscle oxygenation, and vessel diameter in resistance-trained men.

34. The impact of different forms of exercise on endothelial progenitor cells in healthy populations.

35. The effect of repetition tempo on cardiovascular and metabolic stress when time under tension is matched during lower body exercise.

36. Lean mass sparing in resistance-trained athletes during caloric restriction: the role of resistance training volume.

37. Velocity-based resistance training: do women need greater velocity loss to maximize adaptations?

38. The role of the neural stimulus in regulating skeletal muscle hypertrophy.

39. Hormonal and metabolic responses of older adults to resistance training in normobaric hypoxia.

40. Bioelectrical impedance analysis versus reference methods in the assessment of body composition in athletes.

41. Determining concentric and eccentric force–velocity profiles during squatting.

42. Muscle growth adaptations to high-load training and low-load training with blood flow restriction in calf muscles.

43. High-intensity resistance exercise is not as effective as traditional high-intensity interval exercise for increasing the cardiorespiratory response and energy expenditure in recreationally active subjects.

44. Structure and function of Achilles and patellar tendons following moderate slow resistance training in young and old men.

45. Corticospinal and spinal responses following a single session of lower limb motor skill and resistance training.

46. Glucose ingestion before and after resistance training sessions does not augment ribosome biogenesis in healthy moderately trained young adults.

47. Hypoxia matters: comparison of external and internal training load markers during an 8-week resistance training program in normoxia, normobaric hypoxia and hypobaric hypoxia.

48. Sex differences in fatiguability during single-joint resistance exercise in a resistance-trained population.

49. Fatigability of the knee extensors following high- and low-load resistance exercise sessions in trained men.

50. Effects of 4-weeks of elastic variable resistance training on the electrochemical and mechanical components of voluntary electromechanical delay durations.

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