APA
Pereira Monteiro, Marcos Raphael & Pantoja Cardoso, Alan & Gomes de Resende-Neto, Antônio & Silva Vasconcelos, Alan Bruno & Aparecido Camargo, Enilton & Gobbo, Luis Alberto & Maté Muñoz, José Luis & Heredia Elvar, Juan Ramón & Behm, David George & Da Silva-Grigoletto, Marzo Edir (2023-06 ) .Is functional training an efficient approach to improve body composition in older people? A systematic review.
ISO 690
Pereira Monteiro, Marcos Raphael & Pantoja Cardoso, Alan & Gomes de Resende-Neto, Antônio & Silva Vasconcelos, Alan Bruno & Aparecido Camargo, Enilton & Gobbo, Luis Alberto & Maté Muñoz, José Luis & Heredia Elvar, Juan Ramón & Behm, David George & Da Silva-Grigoletto, Marzo Edir. 2023-06 .Is functional training an efficient approach to improve body composition in older people? A systematic review.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/39664
Resumen:
Introduction: Increases in fat mass and reductions in lean mass are associated
with the frailty and mortality of older people. In this context, Functional Training
(FT) is an option to increase lean mass and reduce fat mass in older people. Thus,
this systematic review aims to investigate the effects of FT on body fat and lean
mass in older people.
Methods: We included randomized controlled clinical trials, with at least one
intervention group that employed FT, with the age of participants ¿60 years; and
participants physically independent and healthy. We performed the systematic
investigation in Pubmed MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science, Cochrane Library, and
Google Scholar. We extracted the information and used the PEDro Scale to assess
the methodological quality of each study.
Results: Our research found 3,056 references with five appropriate studies. Of the
five studies, three presented reductions in fat mass, all of them with interventions
between three and 6 months, different training dose parameters, and 100% of the
sample was composed of women. On the other hand, two studies with
interventions between 10 and 12 weeks presented conflicting results.
Conclusion: Despite the limited literature about lean mass, it appears that long term FT interventions may reduce fat mass in older women