Abdominal Binding Improves Neuromuscular Efficiency of the Human Diaphragm during Exercise.

Front Physiol

Clinical Exercise and Respiratory Physiology Laboratory, Department of Kinesiology and Physical Education, McGill UniversityMontréal, QC, Canada.

Published: May 2017

We tested the hypothesis that elastic binding of the abdomen (AB) would enhance neuromuscular efficiency of the human diaphragm during exercise. Twelve healthy non-obese men aged 24.8 ± 1.7 years (mean ± ) completed a symptom-limited constant-load cycle endurance exercise test at 85% of their peak incremental power output with diaphragmatic electromyography (EMGdi) and respiratory pressure measurements under two randomly assigned conditions: unbound control (CTRL) and AB sufficient to increase end-expiratory gastric pressure (Pga,ee) by 5-8 cmHO at rest. By design, AB increased Pga,ee by 6.6 ± 0.6 cmHO at rest. Compared to CTRL, AB significantly increased the transdiaphragmatic pressure swing-to-EMGdi ratio by 85-95% during exercise, reflecting enhanced neuromuscular efficiency of the diaphragm. By contrast, AB had no effect on spirometric parameters at rest, exercise endurance time or an effect on cardiac, metabolic, ventilatory, breathing pattern, dynamic operating lung volume, and perceptual responses during exercise. In conclusion, AB was associated with isolated and acute improvements in neuromuscular efficiency of the diaphragm during exercise in healthy men. The implications of our results are that AB may be an effective means of enhancing neuromuscular efficiency of the diaphragm in clinical populations with diaphragmatic weakness/dysfunction.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5449468PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2017.00345DOI Listing

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