Effect of home-based hot bathing on exercise-induced adaptations associated with short-term resistance exercise training in young men.

IF 2.2 Q3 PHYSIOLOGY Physiological Reports Pub Date : 2025-02-01 DOI:10.14814/phy2.70188
Ryosuke Takeda, Tsubasa Amaike, Taichi Nishikawa, Kohei Watanabe
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Abstract

This study investigated whether home-based bathing intervention (HBBI) improve muscle strength gain and protect cardiovascular function by short-term resistance training (RT). Thirty-one healthy young men measured the maximum voluntary isometric contraction (MVC) of knee extensor, electrically evoked knee extension torque, and mean arterial pressure (MAP). Then, participants were divided into three groups with matching MVC: shower without bathing (control, n = 10), thermoneutral bathing (36°C-bathing, n = 10), and hot bathing (40°C-bathing, n = 11), and conducted 2 weeks of HBBI. Following familiarization for HBBI, participants completed 2 weeks of HBBI and acute RT (five sessions of three sets of 10 isometric knee extension at 60% MVC). Baseline neuromuscular and cardiovascular function was assessed again following completion of the 2 weeks of intervention. MVC was non-significantly increased after the RT period in 40°C-bathing with large effect size (partial η2 = 0.450). The electrically evoked knee extension torque (10/100-Hz ratio) was significantly increased after the RT period in control (p = 0.020). MAP did not alter due to bathing intervention and RT (all p > 0.05). HBBI improved muscle strength without RT-induced alteration of peripheral muscle condition. Shower without bathing reduced muscle strength gain but increased peripheral muscle condition. Short-term RT does not adversely affect the cardiovascular function, regardless of HBBI.

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来源期刊
Physiological Reports
Physiological Reports PHYSIOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
374
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: Physiological Reports is an online only, open access journal that will publish peer reviewed research across all areas of basic, translational, and clinical physiology and allied disciplines. Physiological Reports is a collaboration between The Physiological Society and the American Physiological Society, and is therefore in a unique position to serve the international physiology community through quick time to publication while upholding a quality standard of sound research that constitutes a useful contribution to the field.
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