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The effects of strength training in patients with selected neuromuscular disorders

 

作者: NEIL MCCARTNEY,   DIANNE MOROZ,   SCOTT GARNER,   ALAN MCCOMAS,  

 

期刊: Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise  (OVID Available online 1988)
卷期: Volume 20, issue 4  

页码: 362-368

 

ISSN:0195-9131

 

年代: 1988

 

出版商: OVID

 

关键词: NEUROMUSCULAR DISORDERS;MUSCLE STRENGTH;CONTRACTILE PROPERTIES;FATIGUE;WEIGHTLIFTING TRAINING;MUSCLE ADAPTATIONS

 

数据来源: OVID

 

摘要:

MCCARTNEY, N., D. MOROZ, S. H. GARNER, and A. J. MCCOMAS. The effects of strength training in patients with selected neuromuscular disorders. Meet. Sci. Sports Exerc, Vol. 20, No. 4, pp. 362-368, 1988. Five subjects with spinal muscular atrophy, limb-girdle or facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy, were studied. Measurements pre- and post-training included: maximum isometric, dynamic and isokinetic strength, in single-arm curl and double-leg press exercises; contractile properties of the elbow flexors; computerized tomography of the upper arms and thighs; muscle biopsies from the biceps brachii muscle of each arm in three subjects. Dynamic weight training was performed 3 times per week for 9 wk; exercises comprised unilateral arm curls (the contralateral arm acted as a control), and bilateral leg press. Strength increases in the trained arm were between 19 and 34%, and from -14 to +25% in the control arm; leg strength increased from 11 to 50%. Moreover, the pre-training maximum load could be lifted from 3 to 48 times in the trained limbs, and from 1 to 13 times in an untrained limb before fatigue. Contractile properties of the elbow flexors were unchanged with training, but pre-intervention, three subjects demonstrated incomplete motor unit activation. Most of the gains in strength were apparently due to a neural adaptation, rather than muscle hypertrophy. The tomograms and biopsy samples were inadequate to determine muscle, or muscle fiber areas with confidence; they did indicate however, no additional overt muscle structural damage. Strength training may be a potentially useful therapeutic option in the management of selected neuromuscular disorders.

 

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