Autonomic modulation following an acute bout of bench press with and without blood flow restriction

Eur J Appl Physiol. 2019 Oct;119(10):2177-2183. doi: 10.1007/s00421-019-04201-x. Epub 2019 Aug 5.

Abstract

Purpose: Traditional resistance exercise decreases vagal tone up to 30 min after an acute bout of resistance exercise, which may increase the risk of cardiovascular events. However, the effects of resistance exercise with blood flow restriction (BFR) on autonomic modulation are unclear. To evaluate autonomic modulation after resistance exercise with and without BFR in resistance-trained men.

Methods: Eleven young men volunteered for the study. Autonomic modulation was assessed at rest, 15 (Rec 1), and 25 (Rec 2) minutes after low-load bench press with BFR (LL-BFR), traditional high-load bench press (HL), and a control (CON). Autonomic modulation assessments were expressed as natural logarithm (Ln), and included total power (LnTP), low-frequency power (LnLF), high-frequency power (LnHF), sympathovagal balance (LnLF/LnHF ratio), root mean square of the successive differences (LnRMSSD), and the proportion of intervals differing by > 50 ms from the preceding intervals (LnPNN50). A repeated measures ANOVA was used to evaluate conditions (LL-BFR, HL and CON) across time (Rest, Rec1, and Rec2) on autonomic modulation.

Results: There were significant condition by time interactions for LnTP, LnHF, and LnRMSSD such that they were reduced during recovery after LL-BFR and HL compared to Rest and CON. There were no interactions in the LnLF, LnLF/LnHF ratio, and LnPNN50.

Conclusions: These data suggest that LL-BFR and HL significantly alter autonomic modulation up to 30 min after exercise with significant reduction after HL compared to LL-BFR when exercise volume is equated.

Keywords: Heart rate variability; Resistance exercise; Sympathovagal balance; Vagal modulation.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Autonomic Nervous System / physiology*
  • Blood Pressure
  • Heart Rate
  • Humans
  • Ischemic Preconditioning / methods*
  • Male
  • Regional Blood Flow
  • Resistance Training / methods*