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Abstract

International Journal of Exercise Science 16(1): 293-303, 2023. Applying blood flow restriction (BFR) during resistance exercise is a potent stimulus of muscular adaption, but there is little direct comparison of its effect on neuromuscular function. The purpose of this investigation was to compare surface electromyography amplitude and frequency responses during a 75 (1 × 30, 3 × 15) repetition bout (BFR-75) of BFR to 4 sets to failure (BFR-F). Twelve women (mean ± SD age = 22 ± 4 years; body mass = 72 ± 14.4 kg; height = 162.1 ± 4.0 cm) volunteered for the investigation. One leg was randomly assigned to complete BFR-75 and the other to BFR-F. Each leg performed isokinetic, unilateral, concentric-eccentric, leg extension at 30% of maximal strength while surface electromyographic (sEMG) data was recorded. More repetitions (p = 0.006) were completed during set 2 for BFR-F (21.2 ± 7.4) than BFR-75 (14.7 ± 1.2), but there were no other between condition differences for set 1 (29.8 ± 0.9 vs 28.9 ± 10.1), set 3 (14.4 ± 1.4 vs 17.1 ± 6.9), or set 4 (14.8 ± 0.9 vs 16.3 ± 7.0). Collapsed across condition, normalized sEMG amplitude increased (p = 0.014, 132.66 ± 14.03% to 208.21 ± 24.82%) across the first three sets of exercise then plateaued, while normalized sEMG frequency decreased (p = 0.342, 103.07 ± 3.89% to 83.73 ± 4.47%) across the first two sets then plateaued. The present findings indicated that BFR-75 and BFR-F elicited similar acute neuromuscular fatigue responses. The plateau in amplitude and frequency suggested that maximal motor unit excitation and metabolic buildup may be maximized after two to three sets of BFR-75 and BFR-F.

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