Abstract

The present study aimed to assess whether high intensity exhaustive eccentric (ECC) exercise was associated with a greater decrease in muscle oxygenation compared to high intensity exhaustive concentric (CON) exercise during maximal isokinetic knee extensions. On two separate days, ten recreationally active participants performed maximal isokinetic concentric (KE CON) and eccentric (KE ECC) knee extension exercises at 60° s −1 until exhaustion. Muscle oxygenation profile and activity were acquired continuously from the vastus lateralis (VL) muscle using near-infrared spectroscopy, along with surface electromyography (sEMG). The torque output was significantly greater during KE ECC ( P < 0.01). Total time to exhaustion was longer in ECC condition ( P < 0.01). The decrease in tissue oxygenation index observed between the beginning and end-exercise values was significantly greater during KE ECC than during KE CON ( P < 0.05) while total haemoglobin volume did not differ significantly. KE ECC resulted in a significant increase in end-exercise integrated sEMG ( P < 0.05). We propose that the associated higher intramuscular pressure may have compressed blood vessels and led to a greater decrease in tissue oxygenation index. The observed end-exercise increase in neural drive during KE ECC may have occurred to prevent from muscle performance decrease. These results suggest that, over time, repeated maximal ECC actions induce a greater O 2 extraction compared to maximal CON actions.

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