Hybrid neuromuscular training promotes musculoskeletal adaptations in inactive overweight and obese women: A training-detraining randomized controlled trial
Batrakoulis, A; Tsimeas, P; Deli, CK; et al.Vlachopoulos, D; Ubago-Guisado, E; Poulios, A; Chatzinikolaou, A; Draganidis, D; Papanikolaou, K; Georgakouli, K; Batsilas, D; Gracia-Marco, L; Jamurtas, AZ; Fatouros, I
Date: 15 October 2020
Article
Journal
Journal of Sports Sciences
Publisher
Taylor and Francis / British Association of Sport and Exercise Sciences
Publisher DOI
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of a 10-month high-intensity interval-type neuromuscular training
program on musculoskeletal fitness in overweight and obese women. Forty-nine inactive females
(36.4±4.4 yrs) were randomly assigned to either a control (N=21), a training (N=14, 10 months) or a
training-detraining group (N=14, 5 ...
This study investigated the effects of a 10-month high-intensity interval-type neuromuscular training
program on musculoskeletal fitness in overweight and obese women. Forty-nine inactive females
(36.4±4.4 yrs) were randomly assigned to either a control (N=21), a training (N=14, 10 months) or a
training-detraining group (N=14, 5 months training followed by 5 months detraining). Training used
progressive loaded fundamental movement patterns with prescribed work-to-rest intervals (1:2, 1:1, 2:1)
in a circuit fashion (2-3 rounds). Muscular strength and endurance, flexibility, passive range of motion
(PRoM), static balance, functional movement screen (FMS) and bone mass density (BMD) and content
(BMC) were measured at pre-, mid-, and post-intervention. Ten months of training induced greater
changes than the controls in (i) BMD (+1.9%, p<0.001) and BMC (+1.5%, p=0.023) ii) muscular
strength (25%-53%, p=0.001-0.005); iii) muscular endurance (103%-195%, p<0.001); and iv) mobility
(flexibility: 40%, p<0.001; PRoM [24%-53%, p=0.001-0.05;]; balance: 175%, p=0.058; FMS: +58%,
p<0.001). The response rate to training was exceptionally high (86-100%). Five months of detraining
reduced but not abolished training-induced adaptations. These results suggest that a hybrid-type exercise
approach integrating endurance-based bodyweight drills with resistance-based alternative modes into a
real-world gym setting may promote musculoskeletal fitness in overweight or obese women.
Sport and Health Sciences
Collections of Former Colleges
Item views 0
Full item downloads 0