APA
García Fernández, Pablo & Cimadevilla, Eduardo & Guodemar Pérez, Jesús & Cañuelo Márquez, Ana María & Heredia Elvar, Juan Ramón & Fernández Rodríguez, Tomás & Lozano Estevan, María del Carmen & Hervás Pérez, Juan Pablo & Sánchez Calabuig, María Aránzazu & Garnacho Castaño, Manuel Vicente & Hernández Lougedo, Juan & Maté Muñoz, José Luis (2021-06-20 ) .Muscle Recovery after a Single Bout of Functional Fitness Training.
ISO 690
García Fernández, Pablo & Cimadevilla, Eduardo & Guodemar Pérez, Jesús & Cañuelo Márquez, Ana María & Heredia Elvar, Juan Ramón & Fernández Rodríguez, Tomás & Lozano Estevan, María del Carmen & Hervás Pérez, Juan Pablo & Sánchez Calabuig, María Aránzazu & Garnacho Castaño, Manuel Vicente & Hernández Lougedo, Juan & Maté Muñoz, José Luis. 2021-06-20 .Muscle Recovery after a Single Bout of Functional Fitness Training.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/24572
Abstract:
Background: Functional fitness training (FFT) is a new exercise modality that targets
functional multi-joint actions via both muscle-strengthening exercises and aerobic training intervals.
The aim of the study was to examine muscle recovery over a 20 min period after an FFT workout
in trained adults. Materials and methods: Participants were 28 healthy trained subjects. In a
single session, a countermovement jump (CMJ) was performed to determine several mechanical
variables (jump height, maximum velocity, power) before (preFFT) and 4, 10, and 20 min after the
FFT workout (postFFT). In parallel, capillary blood lactate concentrations were measured pre- and
3 min postFFT. Heart rate was also measured before and after the workout, and perceived exertion
was measured postFFT. Results: Significant differences between the time points preFFT and 4 min
and 10 min postFFT, respectively, were produced in jump height (p = 0.022, p = 0.034), maximum
velocity (p = 0.016, p = 0.005), average power relative (p = 0.018, p = 0.049), and average power total
(p = 0.025, p = 0.049). No differences were observed in any of the variables recorded preFFT and
20 min postFFT. Conclusions: While mechanical variables indicating muscle fatigue were reduced 4
and 10 min postFFT, pre-exercise jump ability only really started to recover 20 min after FFT although
not reaching pre-exercise levels. This means that ideally intervals of around 20 min of rest should be
implemented between training bouts.
Keywords: muscular fatigue; countermovement jump; CrossFit®; muscle strength; high-intensity
training; lactate metabolism