Neuromuscular and Functional Adaptations Promoted by Lower Limb Isometric Training with NMES Conditioning Contractions in Older Adults
Jacopo Stafuzza, Federica Gonnelli, Mattia D’Alleva, Maria De Martino, Lara Mari, Simone Zaccaron, Mirco Floreani, Alessio Floreancig, Davide Padovan, Giacomo Ursella, Gabriele Brugnola, Enrico Rejc, Stefano Lazzer

TL;DR
This study shows that combining isometric training with neuromuscular electrical stimulation can improve strength and function in older adults, even when only one leg is trained.
Contribution
The study introduces a new training method combining isometric exercises and neuromuscular electrical stimulation that shows cross-education effects in older adults.
Findings
ISO-NMES training improved MVC by 30.4% in older adults.
Both trained and untrained legs showed significant increases in MVC and power.
Functional capacities improved in both ISO-NMES and DRT groups.
Abstract
Public health relevance—How does this work relate to a public health issue? The present work addresses the effects of two training modalities on strength, power and functional capacities in older adults. The aforementioned factors are strongly related to the health and functional independence of this population, which is one most in need of public health interventions. The present work addresses the effects of two training modalities on strength, power and functional capacities in older adults. The aforementioned factors are strongly related to the health and functional independence of this population, which is one most in need of public health interventions. Public health significance—Why is this work of significance to public health? This work broadens the knowledge related to the implementation of isometric training and neuromuscular electrical stimulation for improving…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMuscle activation and electromyography studies · Cardiovascular and exercise physiology · Exercise and Physiological Responses
