AI Article Synopsis

  • * Participants underwent NMES training showed significant improvements in knee extensor muscle strength (≈9.3% increase) and muscle volume (≈3.3%-6.4% increase) compared to a control group.
  • * Results indicated that NMES training led to muscle strength gains largely due to muscle hypertrophy, but changes in muscle quality were limited, particularly in deep muscles like the vastus intermedius.

Article Abstract

This study investigated the effect of an 8-week neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) training programme (3 days/week) on muscle quantity and quality and single-joint performance in the knee extensors. Thirty-nine untrained young male participants were randomly assigned to NMES training ( = 21) and control ( = 18) groups. The 8-week NMES training induced significant increase in the isometric maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) torque of the knee extensors (≈9.3%), muscle volume of the individual and entire quadriceps muscles determined by magnetic resonance imaging (≈3.3%-6.4%), and a significant decrease in the ultrasound echo intensity of the vastus lateralis (≈-4.0%); however, hypertrophy of the vastus intermedius (i.e., the deep muscle) was limited (≈3.3%). In the NMES training group, the repeated measures correlations of the isometric MVC torque with the muscle volume of the entire quadriceps muscle and each quadriceps muscle were significant ( (20) = 0.551-0.776), whereas that of the isometric MVC torque with the ultrasound echo intensity of the vastus lateralis was not significant. These findings suggest that NMES training produces muscle strength gains, muscle hypertrophy, and partial muscle quality improvement and that the NMES training-induced muscle strength gains is caused by muscle hypertrophy in the knee extensors.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02640414.2024.2318540DOI Listing

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