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Abstract

Most literature examining the influence of exercise intensity on anxiety symptoms has been aerobic training and has found high-intensity efforts to be more beneficial than low-intensity on reducing symptoms. Yet, no study has directly assessed resistance training exercise intensity on anxiety symptoms and other perceptual outcomes acutely. PURPOSE: To determine the impact of deadlift exercise intensity on rating of perceived exertion (RPE), perceived fatigue and anxiety during an acute session. METHODS: 20 recreationally active adults (n=4 females, n=16 males, age: 25.7±8.6 yrs; mass: 92.8±29.7 kg; height: 179.4±9.8 cm) completed 4 sets of 6 repetitions of the deadlift exercise at a light (3-4 on 0-10 RPE scale) and moderately heavy (6-8 on 0-10 RPE scale) intensity (8 total sets). Prior to resistance training (baseline) and following each 4-set condition (light vs moderate) rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was determined using the OMNI-RES 0-10 scale, perceived fatigue was measured with a visual analog scale for fatigue (VAS-F), and perceived anxiety was measured with state-trait anxiety inventory short form (STAI-6). A one-way ANOVA with repeated measures was used (p

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