Effect of 16-week blood flow restriction exercise on functional fitness in sarcopenic women: A randomized controlled trial

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Abstract

SUMMARY: We investigated the effect of the intervention using the BFR method on functional capacity after 16 weeks in elderly women. In a controlled clinical trial, 23 women were randomly allocated into two groups, low-intensity exercise with blood flow restriction (LI + BFR, N = 11, Age: 69.40 ± 5.73) and control group (CG, N = 12, Age: 69.00 ± 6.39). The LI + BFR group had a volume of 75 repetitions at 20-30 % of 1RM and 3-4 sets per exercise (30, 15, 15 and repetitions with 30" rest between sets). The CG did not undergo any type of exercise. Functional capacity, anthropometry and sarcopenia were verified through a battery of tests before and after 16 weeks. The LI + BFR group had significant improvement in performance in Handgrip strength, Chair Stand, Arm curl, 2.44 Up-and-Go and 6 min walk, Sit-and-reach and Back Scratch (p<0.05) after the intervention. The elderly women were still classified as sarcopenic, despite the improvement in the Muscle Mass Index (p<0.01). CG did not present significant changes. The BFR method can be an effective in the intervention process using physical exercise as an auxiliary strategy in the control of sarcopenia, providing a physical profile during the aging process.

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Letieri, R. V., Furtado, G. E., Barros, P. M. N., de Farias, M. J. A., Antunez, B. F., Gomes, B. B., & Teixeira, A. M. M. B. (2019). Effect of 16-week blood flow restriction exercise on functional fitness in sarcopenic women: A randomized controlled trial. International Journal of Morphology, 37(1), 59–64. https://doi.org/10.4067/S0717-95022019000100059

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