2022
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-19857-3
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Acute and chronic cardiometabolic responses induced by resistance training with blood flow restriction in HIV patients

Abstract: Resistance training with blood flow restriction (RTBFR) allows physically impaired people living with HIV (PWH) to exercise at lower intensities than traditional resistance training (TRT). But the acute and chronic cardiac and metabolic responses of PWH following an RTBFR protocol are unknown. The objective was to compare the safety of acute and chronic effects on hemodynamic and lipid profiles between TRT or RTBFR in PWH. In this randomized control trial, 14 PWH were allocated in RTBFR (GRTBFR; n = 7) or TRT … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The potential chronic effects of RT-BFR on blood pressure can be attributed to several physiological mechanisms, including improved endothelial function, increased nitric oxide production, activation of muscle metaboreflex, muscle hypertrophy, increased metabolic demand, and hormonal adaptation. 27 It is important to note that although these mechanisms have been proposed previously, the exact physiological processes underlying the chronic effects of RT-BFR on blood pressure are not yet fully understood and additional research is needed to understand and validate them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…The potential chronic effects of RT-BFR on blood pressure can be attributed to several physiological mechanisms, including improved endothelial function, increased nitric oxide production, activation of muscle metaboreflex, muscle hypertrophy, increased metabolic demand, and hormonal adaptation. 27 It is important to note that although these mechanisms have been proposed previously, the exact physiological processes underlying the chronic effects of RT-BFR on blood pressure are not yet fully understood and additional research is needed to understand and validate them.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 96%