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Plyometrics can preserve peak power during 2 months of physical inactivity: an RCT including a one-year follow-up

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journal contribution
posted on 2018-05-29, 00:00 authored by Andreas Kramer, Jakob Kümmel, Albert Gollhofer, Gabriele Armbrecht, Ramona Ritzmann, Daniel Belavy, Dieter Felsenberg, Markus Gruber
Objective: Inactivity results in a marked loss of muscle function, especially in movements requiring high power, force, and rate of force development. The aim of the present study was to evaluate if jump training can prevent these deteriorating effects of physical inactivity. Methods: Performance and muscle activity during several types of jumps was assessed directly before and after 60 days of bed rest as well as during follow-up visits in 23 male participants. Participants in the jump training group (JUMP, 12 participants) trained 5-6x per week during the bed rest period in a sledge jump system that allows jumps in a horizontal position, whereas the control group (CTRL, 11 participants) did not train. Results: Performance and muscle activity considerably decreased after bed rest in the control group but not in the training group, neither for countermovement jumps (peak power CTRL -31%, JUMP +0%, group × time interaction effect p < 0.001), nor for squat jumps (peak power CTRL -35%, JUMP +1%, p < 0.001) and repetitive hops (peak force CTRL -35%, JUMP -2%, p < 0.001; rate of force development CTRL -53%, JUMP +4%, p < 0.001). The control group's performance had returned to baseline 3 months after bed rest. Conclusion: Despite the short exercise duration, the jump training successfully prevented power and strength losses throughout 2 months of bed rest.Thus, plyometrics can be recommended as an effective and efficient type of exercise for sedentary populations, preventing the deterioration of neuromuscular performance during physical inactivity.

History

Journal

Frontiers in physiology

Volume

9

Article number

633

Pagination

1-11

Location

Lausanne, Switzerland

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1664-042X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Authors

Publisher

Frontiers