The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of an eccentric training session on EIMD at different arm sites immediately before and time points ranging from 10 min after to three days after the intervention. Our initial hypothesis of non-homogeneity along the muscles was supported only for the variable EI% at 24 h, 48 h and 72 h. The other variables changed similarly between the two arm sites after eccentric exercise. The disorganization of the muscle tissue structures with possible intracellular material extravasation may be the principal structural reason for the changes in the ultrasound image brightness observed by EI (Pillen and van Alfen, 2011). Healthy skeletal muscle is a hypoechoic tissue that appears darker on ultrasound images than bone, fat or fascia (connective) tissues, which are hyperechoic and reflective. Muscle exudates from inflammatory processes due to the eccentric training also appear lighter on US images. In this sense, EI is thought to be a promising approach to quantify EIMD at local muscle sites (Chen and Nosaka, 2006; Radaelli et al., 2012; Nosaka and Sakamoto, 2001). The mean of the histogram of grey levels on the US image provides a unidimensional image analysis and classifies the ROI of the tissue as hyperechoic or hypoechoic (Matta et al., 2018). In general, the EI% values at proximal (60%) and distal (80%) arm lengths increased significantly from 24 h to 72 h after the Post and 10 min measurements for both arm sites. These results confirmed previous findings seen at 48 h after the training session (Chen and Nosaka, 2006; Nosaka and Sakamoto, 2001; Pillen and van Alfen, 2011). Chen and Nosaka (2006) reported a significant EI increase (approximately 20%) three days after an eccentric exercise for elbow flexors among untrained men, corroborating our findings for the proximal site at 48 h (22.4%). For the distal site, our findings revealed higher EI% changes after 24 h (37%), increasing at 48 h (60%) and 72 h (97%). The EI% significantly increased at 24 h, 48 h and 72 h. In particular, after 24 h, 48 h and 72 h, this difference reached 37%, 60% and 97%, respectively, from baseline for the distal site and was much lower for the proximal site, suggesting a non-uniform damage response along the elbow flexors. At the distal site, close to the muscle-tendon junction, the brachialis muscle can be visualized on US images, contributing to higher EI values, as has also been documented by others (Nosaka and Sakamoto, 2001). At the proximal arm site, only the biceps brachii is visualized. Using image processing on magnetic resonance images of contracting biceps, Pappas et al. (2002) demonstrated non-uniform shortening along the anterior surface of the biceps brachii during isometric elbow flexion contraction that was more pronounced at the proximal relative to the distal site of the muscle. Additionally, the authors demonstrated a specific level of stretching of the biceps brachii fibres on the distal site. Oedema is a commonly observed consequence of EIMD, as described by Hydahl and Hubal (2014) on an invited review. In this sense, our study demonstrated a significant increase in elbow flexors oedema after eccentric intervention on both arms sites. The MT% of the distal site increased significant only after 72 h (18%) for the Post measurement; for the proximal site, the MT% exhibited higher values at 48 h (16%) and 72 h (22%). Our results corroborate the findings of Chapman et al. (2008) in experiments performed on untrained men with an increase of up to 15-20% after eccentric training in only one muscle length from 24 h to 72 h. However, to date, no study has assessed MT at different arm sites. Some studies evaluating oedema at different muscle lengths used arm circumference measurements; their results did not demonstrate significant differences between arm sites (Chen, 2003; Chen and Nosaka, 2006; Jubeau et al., 2012). The elbow flexion PT was significantly reduced immediately after the intervention compared with baseline (approximately 50%), exhibiting a 37% deficit at 72 h. Corroborating our findings, Chen and Nosaka (2006) reported a PT decrease of approximately 40% volume for elbow flexors in untrained men 72 h after EIMD was induced. Furthermore, a decrease in PT after eccentric interventions among untrained subjects was reported by others with a similar exercise protocol (Chan et al., 2012), decreasing the peak torque by nearly 50% 24 h after EIMD. The failure in the coupling of cross-bridges is believed to be the main contributor to the force depression together with other structural disorganization after tissue injury (Warren et al., 2002). These mechanisms can account for approximately 57-75% of the strength loss in the first five days after injury, with the remaining 25% attributed to structural damage in the cytoskeleton (Warren et al., 2002). A similar increase in DOMS was observed for both sites, with higher values occurring between 24 h and 48 h after eccentric intervention, as has been reported by others (Chen et al., 2012; Pillen and van Alfen, 2011). In the present study, no significant difference in muscle soreness was found between the two sites, differing from the results of Dierking et al. (2000), who demonstrated higher soreness perception in the distal region of the elbow flexors using a modified non-controlled pressure plumber apparatus (Dierking et al., 2000). DOMS is accepted to result from physical damage to muscle tissue that triggers subsequent inflammatory processes (Chan et al., 2012). Lau et al. (2015) have recently related muscle soreness to inflammation primarily in the muscle fascia using an electrical threshold (Lau et al., 2015). These authors described a pattern that differs from the one described in our study; their results indicated lower DOMS in the central line of the elbow flexors and distal regions following six sets of 10 eccentric repetitions of the elbow flexors. The present data should be considered restricted to untrained subjects performing a single eccentric training session applied with an isokinetic dynamometer. Nevertheless, conventional training should be tested to ensure a practical field response in the EIMD parameters for the same behaviour. Furthermore, acute EIMD results should not be generalized for chronic effects, for example, selective elbow flexors hypertrophy. |