Walking with wide-rigid blood flow restriction cuffs resulted in significantly greater increases in systolic blood pressure (150 vs 127 mmHg) and myocardial oxygen demand compared to narrow-elastic bands.
RCT (n=15)
Open-label
Randomized crossover order
No
Does walking with wide-rigid cuffs versus narrow-elastic bands alter acute hemodynamic responses and myocardial oxygen demand in young healthy adults?
Narrow-elastic blood flow restriction bands elicit significantly lower acute hemodynamic stress and myocardial oxygen demand compared to wide-rigid cuffs during light-intensity walking, suggesting a safer profile for exercise.
Absolute Event Rate: 150% vs 127%
p-value: p=<0.05
Background: Blood flow restriction (BFR) training is becoming a popular form of exercise. Walking exercise in combination with pressurized wide-rigid (WR) cuffs elicits higher cardiac workload and a vascular dysfunction due presumably to reperfusion injury to the endothelium. In contrast, narrow-elastic (NE) BFR bands may elicit different hemodynamic effects. Therefore, we compared the acute cardiovascular responses to two distinct forms of BFR training during light-intensity exercise. Methods and Results: 15 young healthy participants (M=9, F=6) performed 5 bouts of 2-minute walking intervals at 0.9 m/s with a 1-minute rest and deflation period with either WR, NE, or no bands placed on upper thighs. Cuff pressure was inflated to 160 mmHg in WR cuffs and 300 mmHg in NE bands while no cuffs were used for the control. Increases in heart rate and arterial blood pressure were greater (p<0.05) in the WR than the NE and control conditions. Double product increased to a greater extent in the WR than in the NE and control conditions. Increases in perceived exertion and blood lactate concentration were greater (p<0.05) in the WR compared with the NE and control conditions (p<0.05), while no differences emerged between the NE and control conditions. There were no changes in arterial stiffness or brachial artery flow-mediated dilation after all three trials. Conclusion: Use of wide-rigid BFR cuffs resulted in a marked increase in blood pressure and myocardial oxygen demand compared with narrow-elastic BFR bands, suggesting that narrow-elastic bands present a safer alternative for at-risk populations to perform BFR exercise. Clinical Trial Registration: This study was registered in the Clinicaltrials.gov (NCT03540147).
Stray‐Gundersen et al. (Fri,) conducted a rct in Healthy (n=15). Wide-rigid (WR) blood flow restriction cuffs vs. Narrow-elastic (NE) bands (300 mmHg) and no cuffs was evaluated on Systolic blood pressure during walking (p=<0.05). Walking with wide-rigid blood flow restriction cuffs resulted in significantly greater increases in systolic blood pressure (150 vs 127 mmHg) and myocardial oxygen demand compared to narrow-elastic bands.