AI Article Synopsis

  • Training volume is crucial for physiological adaptations in resistance training, but severe COPD patients struggle with dyspnea during two-limb low-load/high-repetition resistance training (LLHR-RT), making single-limb LLHR-RT a potentially better option for increasing training volume.
  • The study involving 33 COPD patients assessed the effects of 8 weeks of single- versus two-limb LLHR-RT on exercise capacity, health status, and muscle function, revealing that while both methods improved overall health, single-limb training led to a larger percentage of participants meeting minimal clinically important difference in walking distance.
  • Results indicated that single-limb LLHR-RT reduced dyspnea during training without significantly increasing overall training volume, but both training types improved

Article Abstract

Background: Training volume is paramount in the magnitude of physiological adaptations following resistance training. However, patients with severe COPD are limited by dyspnea during traditional two-limb low-load/high-repetition resistance training (LLHR-RT), resulting in suboptimal training volumes. During a single exercise session, single-limb LLHR-RT decreases the ventilatory load and enables higher localized training volumes compared with two-limb LLHR-RT.

Research Question: Does single-limb LLHR-RT lead to more profound effects compared with two-limb LLHR-RT on exercise capacity (6-min walk distance [6MWD]), health status, muscle function, and limb adaptations in patients with severe COPD?

Study Design And Methods: Thirty-three patients (mean age 66 ± 7 years; FEV 39 ± 10% predicted) were randomized to 8 weeks of single- or two-limb LLHR-RT. Exercise capacity (6MWD), health status, and muscle function were compared between groups. Quadriceps muscle biopsy specimens were collected to examine physiological responses.

Results: Single-limb LLHR-RT did not further enhance 6MWD compared with two-limb LLHR-RT (difference, 14 [-12 to 39 m]. However, 73% in the single-limb group exceeded the known minimal clinically important difference of 30 m compared with 25% in the two-limb group (P = .02). Health status and muscle function improved to a similar extent in both groups. During training, single-limb LLHR-RT resulted in a clinically relevant reduction in dyspnea during training compared with two-limb LLHR-RT (-1.75; P = .01), but training volume was not significantly increased (23%; P = .179). Quadriceps muscle citrate synthase activity (19%; P = .03), hydroxyacyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase protein levels (32%; P < .01), and capillary-to-fiber ratio (41%; P < .01) were increased compared with baseline after pooling muscle biopsy data from all participants.

Interpretation: Single-limb LLHR-RT did not further increase mean 6MWD compared with two-limb LLHR-RT, but it reduced exertional dyspnea and enabled more people to reach clinically relevant improvements in 6MWD. Independent of execution strategy, LLHR-RT improved exercise capacity, health status, muscle endurance, and enabled several physiological muscle adaptations, reducing the negative consequences of limb muscle dysfunction in COPD.

Clinical Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT02283580; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chest.2020.12.005DOI Listing

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