Plasma catecholamine responses to four resistance exercise tests in men and women |
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Authors: | Teemu Pullinen Caroline Nicol Ewen MacDonald Paavo V. Komi |
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Affiliation: | Department of Biology of Physical Activity, University of Jyv?skyl?, P.O. Box 35, FIN-40351 Jyv?skyl?, Finland, FI Faculté des Sciences du Sport, Université de la Méditerranée, Marseille, France, FR Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Kuopio, Kuopio, Finland, FI
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Abstract: | The plasma adrenaline ([A]) and noradrenaline ([NA]) concentration responses of nine men and eight women were investigated in four resistance exercise tests (E80, E60, E40 and E20), in which the subjects had to perform a maximal number of bilateral knee extension-flexion movements at a given cycle pace of 0.5?Hz, but at different load levels (80%, 60%, 40% and 20% of 1 repetition maximum, respectively). The four test sessions were separated by a minimal interval of 3 rest days. The number of repetitions (Repmax), the total work (W tot) done normalized for the lean body mass and the heart rate (HR) responses were similar in the two groups in each test. In addition, no differences were found between the two groups in [A] and [NA] either before or after the exercise tests. The postexercise [NA], both in the men [10.8 (SD 7.0) nmol?·?l?1] and in the women [11.7 (SD 7.4) nmol?·?l?1], was clearly the highest in E20, where also the Repmax, W tot, the total amount of integrated electromyograph activity in the agonist muscles and the peak postexercise blood lactate concentration [men 8.3 (SD 1.6) vs women 7.3 (SD 0.9) mmol?·?l?1, ns] were significantly higher than in the other tests. Although the postexercise [A] in E20 both in the men [7.1 (SD 6.0) nmol?·?l?1] and in the women [5.2 (SD 2.0) nmol?·?l?1] were higher than in E80 [men 3.1 (SD 4.2), women 2.1 (SD 2.0) nmol?·?l?1] (P?0.05), they were not significantly different from E60 [men 3.6 (SD 1.9), women 4.0 (SD 3.3) nmol?·?l?1] and E40 [men 3.8 (SD 4.1), women 5.8 (SD 4.0) nmol?·?l?1] in either group. The present study did not indicate any sex differences in performance and in plasma catecholamine responses in different exhausting resistance exercise tests performed with the knee extensor muscles. In both groups the plasma [NA] response was clearly the largest in the longest exercise with the greatest amount of muscle activity and work done, and with the largest blood lactate response. The differences in the plasma [A] responses between the exercises tended to be somewhat smaller. |
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