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Musculoskeletal Adaptations to Training wit the Advanced Resistive Exercise Device

机译:肌肉骨骼适应训练,采用先进的阻力运动装置

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Resistance exercise has been used as a means to prevent the musculoskeletal losses associated with spaceflight. Therefore, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration designed the Advanced Resistive Exercise Device (ARED) to replace the initial device flown on the International Space Station. The ARED uses vacuum cylinders and inertial flywheels to simulate, in the absence of gravity, the constant mass and inertia, respectively, of free weight (FW) exercise. Purpose: To compare the musculoskeletal effects of resistance exercise training using the ARED with the effects of training with FW. Methods: Previously untrained, ambulatory subjects exercised using one of two modalities: FW (6 men and 3 women) or ARED (8 men and 3 women). Subjects performed squat, heel raise, and dead lift exercises 3 d-wk~(-1) for 16 wk. Squat, heel raise, and dead lift strength (one-repetition maximum; using FW and ARED), bone mineral density (via dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry), and vertical jump were assessed before, during, and after training. Muscle mass (via magnetic resonance imaging) and bone morphology (via quantitative computed tomography) were measured before and after training. Bone biomarkers and circulating hormones were measured before training and after 4, 8, and 16 wk. Results: Muscle strength, muscle volume, vertical jump height, and lumbar spine bone mineral density (via dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry and quantitative computed tomography) significantly increased (P < 0.05) in both groups. There were no significant differences between groups in any of the dependent variables at any time. Conclusions: After 16 wk of training, ARED exercise resulted in musculoskeletal effects that were not significantly different from the effects of training with FW. Because FW training mitigates bed rest-induced deconditioning, the ARED may be an effective countermeasure for spaceflight-induced deconditioning and should be validated during spaceflight.
机译:抵抗运动已被用作防止与航天有关的肌肉骨骼损失的手段。因此,美国国家航空航天局设计了高级抵抗运动设备(ARED),以取代国际空间站上空飞行的最初设备。 ARED使用真空缸和惯性飞轮分别在无重力的情况下模拟自由重量(FW)运动的恒定质量和惯性。目的:比较使用ARED进行的阻力运动训练与通过FW进行训练的肌肉骨骼效果。方法:以前未经训练的门诊受试者使用以下两种方式之一进行锻炼:FW(6名男性和3名女性)或ARED(8名男性和3名女性)。受试者进行3 d-wk〜(-1)的下蹲,脚跟抬高和硬拉练习16 wk。在训练前,训练中和训练后,评估下蹲,脚跟抬高和硬拉强度(最大重复次数;使用FW和ARED),骨矿物质密度(通过双能X线骨密度仪)和垂直跳动。训练前后分别测量肌肉质量(通过磁共振成像)和骨骼形态(通过定量计算机断层扫描)。在训练前和第4、8和16周后测量骨生物标志物和循环激素。结果:两组的肌肉力量,肌肉容量,垂直跳高和腰椎骨矿物质密度(通过双能X线骨密度仪和定量计算机断层扫描)显着增加(P <0.05)。在任何时候,任何因变量的组之间都没有显着差异。结论:经过16周的训练,ARED锻炼产生的肌肉骨骼作用与FW训练的作用无明显差异。由于FW训练减轻了卧床休息引起的不适,因此ARED可能是航天诱发的不适的有效对策,应该在航天期间进行验证。

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