Quercetin ingestion alters motor unit behavior and enhances improvement in muscle strength following resistance training in older adults: a randomized, double-blind, controlled trial.
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Abstract
Background: During resistance training, quercetin ingestion can enhance motor unit (MU) with a higher recruitment threshold in older adults.
Objective: We investigated the effects of daily quercetin glucoside ingestion on chronic adaptations in muscle strength and MU behavior following resistance training in healthy older adults.
Methods: Twenty-six older adults were randomly allocated to two groups that completed 6-week resistance training intervention with the ingestion of either placebo (PLA) or quercetin glycosides (QUE) at 200 mg/day. Maximal voluntary force (MVF) during isometric knee extension, muscle mass, and MU firing behavior during ramp task at 70%MVF were measured before (PRE) and after (POST) intervention.
Results: In both groups, knee extensor MVF was significantly increased (both p < 0.001), and the improvement in QUE (115.1 ± 11.0%) was greater than in PLA (105.3 ± 4.8%) (p < 0.001) by the Mann-Whitney test. Muscle mass was not changed from PRE to POST in PLA or QUE (p > 0.050). At POST, firing rates of Mus with relatively moderate (recruited between 20 and 40%MVF) or higher (recruited between 20 and 40%MVF) recruitment thresholds were higher in QUE than PLA (p < 0.050). There was a significant correlation between %change in MVF and %change in firing rates of MUs with a relatively higher recruitment threshold from PRE to POST (p = 0.018, r = 0.642).
Conclusions: These results suggest that the adaptations of MUs with higher recruitment thresholds explain the greater improvement in muscle strength associated with QUE ingestion.
期刊介绍:
The European Journal of Nutrition publishes original papers, reviews, and short communications in the nutritional sciences. The manuscripts submitted to the European Journal of Nutrition should have their major focus on the impact of nutrients and non-nutrients on
immunology and inflammation,
gene expression,
metabolism,
chronic diseases, or
carcinogenesis,
or a major focus on
epidemiology, including intervention studies with healthy subjects and with patients,
biofunctionality of food and food components, or
the impact of diet on the environment.