Abstract

Although blood flow-restricted low-intensity resistance training (BFR-RT) increases muscle size and strength in older adults, the effect of detraining on muscle adaptation is unclear. We investigated the effects of 24weeks of detraining on thigh muscle cross-sectional area (CSA) and one-repetition maximum strength (1-RM) in older adults who had previously participated in 12weeks of training (BFR-RT, 20-30% 1-RM, knee extension and leg press) or non-BFR training. Both 1-RM and relative dynamic strengths (1-RM divided by quadriceps femoris (QF) muscle CSA) were higher at both post-training and detraining than at pre-training for the BFR-RT group (p<0.05). QF muscle CSA was higher at only post-training than at pre-training for the BFR-RT group (p<0.01). Increased muscle strength following 12weeks of training with BFR-RT was well preserved at 24weeks of detraining, which is due mainly to neural adaptation in older adults.

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