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Hypoalgesia and Conditioned Pain Modulation in Blood Flow Restriction Resistance Exercise.

Authors :
Yang J
Rolnick N
Merriwether E
Rao S
Source :
International journal of sports medicine [Int J Sports Med] 2024 Oct; Vol. 45 (11), pp. 810-819. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 08.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

We compared the magnitude of exercise-induced hypoalgesia and conditioned pain modulation between blood-flow restriction (BFR) resistance exercise (RE) and moderate-intensity RE. Twenty-five asymptomatic participants performed unilateral leg press in two visits. For moderate-intensity RE, subjects exercised at 50% 1RM without BFR, whereas BFR RE exercised at 30% 1RM with a cuff inflated to 60% limb occlusion pressure. Exercise-induced hypoalgesia was quantified by pressure pain threshold changes before and after RE. Conditioned pain modulation was tested using cold water as the conditioning stimulus and mechanical pressure as the test stimulus and quantified as pressure pain threshold change. Difference in conditioned pain modulation pre- to post-RE was then calculated. The differences of RE on pain modulations were compared using paired t-tests. Pearson's r was used to examine the correlation between exercise-induced hypoalgesia and changes in conditioned pain modulation. We found greater hypoalgesia with BFR RE compared to moderate-intensity RE (p=0.008). Significant moderate correlations were found between exercise-induced hypoalgesia and changes in conditioned pain modulation (BFR: r=0.63, moderate-intensity: r=0.72). BFR RE has favorable effects on pain modulation in healthy adults and the magnitude of exercise-induced hypoalgesia is positively correlated with conditioned pain modulation activation.<br />Competing Interests: Nicholas Rolnick is the founder of The BFR PROS and teaches BFR training workshops to fitness and rehabilitation practitioners using a variety of BFR training devices. Ericka Merriwether is a Member of the Board of Directors for the United States Association for the Study of Pain (USASP).No conflict of interested from other authors.<br /> (Thieme. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1439-3964
Volume :
45
Issue :
11
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
International journal of sports medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38588713
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1055/a-2301-9115