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Males benefit more from cold water immersion during repeated handgrip contractions than females despite similar oxygen kinetics
J. Baláš, J. Kodejška, D. Krupková, D. Giles
Language English Country Japan
Document type Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial
Grant support
PROGRES, No. Q41: Biological aspects of the investigation of human movement.
Univerzita Karlova v Praze
NLK
BioMedCentral
from 2020-01-01 to 2024-01-12
Directory of Open Access Journals
from 2020 to 2024
PubMed Central
from 2009
ProQuest Central
from 2019-01-01
Health & Medicine (ProQuest)
from 2019-01-01
ROAD: Directory of Open Access Scholarly Resources
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Springer Nature OA/Free Journals
from 2020-01-01
- MeSH
- Exercise physiology MeSH
- Adult MeSH
- Cryotherapy methods MeSH
- Oxygen physiology MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Cold Temperature adverse effects MeSH
- Immersion MeSH
- Sex Factors MeSH
- Hand Strength physiology MeSH
- Muscle Contraction physiology MeSH
- Water MeSH
- Check Tag
- Adult MeSH
- Humans MeSH
- Male MeSH
- Female MeSH
- Publication type
- Journal Article MeSH
- Randomized Controlled Trial MeSH
The purpose of the present study was to assess the effect of different water immersion temperatures on handgrip performance and haemodynamic changes in the forearm flexors of males and females. Twenty-nine rock-climbers performed three repeated intermittent handgrip contractions to failure with 20 min recovery on three separate laboratory visits. For each visit, a randomly assigned recovery strategy was applied: cold water immersion (CWI) at 8 °C (CW8), 15 °C (CW15) or passive recovery (PAS). While handgrip performance significantly decreased in the subsequent trials for the PAS (p < 0.05), there was a significant increase in time to failure for the second and third trial for CW15 and in the second trial for CW8; males having greater performance improvement (44%) after CW15 than females (26%). The results indicate that CW15 was a more tolerable and effective recovery strategy than CW8 and the same CWI protocol may lead to different recovery in males and females.
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