2019
DOI: 10.1002/tsm2.118
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Muscular performance decreases with increasing complexity of resistance exercises in subjects with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

Abstract: Chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD) is associated with impaired muscle functions in addition to the impaired cardiopulmonary capacity inherent to the disease.The purpose of this study was to compare muscular performance between COPD subjects (COPD, n = 11, GOLD grade II/III; FEV 1 = 53 ± 14% predicted; 61 ± 7 years) and healthy controls (HC, n = 12, 66 ± 8 years) in three resistance exercises with different complexity: (a) one-legged knee extension (1KE), and (b) one-and (c) twolegged leg press (1LP and 2L… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…Overall, COPD showed marked and hitherto unrecognized responsiveness to resistance training in respect of improvements in muscle strength, muscle mass, muscle quality and one-legged endurance performance, contradicting previous suggestions of a negative impact of co-morbidities such as low cardiorespiratory fitness and chronic low-grade systemic inflammation [ 8 , 24 ]. Indeed, a more severe COPD diagnosis was associated with larger increases in muscle mass and muscle strength improvements.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 63%
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“…Overall, COPD showed marked and hitherto unrecognized responsiveness to resistance training in respect of improvements in muscle strength, muscle mass, muscle quality and one-legged endurance performance, contradicting previous suggestions of a negative impact of co-morbidities such as low cardiorespiratory fitness and chronic low-grade systemic inflammation [ 8 , 24 ]. Indeed, a more severe COPD diagnosis was associated with larger increases in muscle mass and muscle strength improvements.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 63%
“…Of note, the unilateral resistance-training design was arguably supportive for the pronounced resistance-training effects in COPD participants. By reducing cardiorespiratory demand, and thus facilitating higher degrees of muscle activation and muscle mass-specific intensities during exercise compared to conventional two-legged resistance exercise [ 24 ] this seems to translate into larger functional improvements for this population [ 16 ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…COPD thus showed marked and hitherto unrecognized responsiveness to resistance training, contradicting previous suggestions of a negative impact of co-morbidities such as low cardiorespiratory fitness and chronic low-grade systemic inflammation. 8,38…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…COPD thus showed marked and hitherto unrecognized responsiveness to resistance training, contradicting previous suggestions of a negative impact of co-morbidities such as low cardiorespiratory fitness and chronic low-grade systemic inflammation. 8,38 Insert Figure 4 around here Cycling and functional performance. COPD and Healthy showed pronounced and similarly scaled training-associated improvements in whole-body endurance performance, measured as changes from baseline, including 6-min step test performance, 1-min sit-tostand performance and maximal workload achieved during two-legged cycling ( Figure 5).…”
Section: The Efficacy Of the Resistance Training Intervention: Copd Vmentioning
confidence: 99%