Effects of high-velocity resistance training and creatine supplementation in untrained healthy aging males

Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism, e-First Articles. The purpose was to investigate the effects of high-velocity resistance training (HVRT) and creatine supplementation in untrained healthy aging males. Participants were randomized to supplement with creatine (0.1 g ·kg−1·day−1 of creatine + 0.1 g·kg−1·day−1 of maltodextrin) or placebo (0.2 g·kg−1·day−1 of maltodextrin) during 8 weeks of HVRT. Prior to and following HVRT and supplementation, assessments were made for muscle strength, muscle thickness, peak torque, and physical performance. The re was a significant increase over time for all measures of muscle strength (p< 0.001), muscle thickness (p< 0.001), and some measures of peak torque (knee flexion; 1.05 and 3.14 rad/s; p< 0.001) and physical performance (balance board time-to-completion; p = 0.017). There was a group × time interaction for leg press strength (p = 0.044) and total lower-body strength (leg press, knee flexion, knee extension combined; p = 0.039). The creatine group experienced greater gains in leg press and total lower-body strength compared with the placebo group, with no other differences. HVRT increases muscle strength, muscle thickness, and some measures of peak torque and physical performance in untrained healthy aging males. The addition of creatine supplementation to HVRT further augments the gains in leg press and total lower-body strength. Novelty High-velocity resistance training increases muscle mass and...
Source: Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism - Category: Physiology Authors: Source Type: research