Letter to editor - (2012)11, 773 - 774 |
Repeated Bout Effect and Cross-Transfer: Evidence of Dominance Influence |
Lais Ferreira1, Rafael Pereira2, Anthony C. Hackney3, Marco Machado1, 4 |
Dear Editor-in-chief |
Resistance exercise often leads to exercise-induced muscle damage (EIMD). Muscle oedema, muscle soreness, increase in serum creatine kinase (CK) activity, restricted range of motion and strength loss are markers of EIMD. It is well documented that symptoms of EIMD are reduced following a repeated bout of similar exercise, this occurrence has been referred to as the repeated bout effect (RBE) (McHugh, Cross-transfer or cross-education is a phenomenon related to increases in the strength of the contralateral (untrained) limb following training in the ipsilateral (trained) limb (Connolly et al., Interestingly, there is evidence of different motor control strategies employed by dominant and non-dominant arms during motor tasks (Pereira et al., We submitted 21 volunteers (19.0 ± 1.7 yr; 66.4 ± 8.5 kg; 1.76 ± 0.07 m), healthy and non-active men, to two bouts of upper limb damaging exercise. The volunteers were randomly divided into 3 groups: N-N (n = 7) that carried out 2 exercise bouts with non-dominant arm (control); N-D (n = 7) that carried out the first bout with non-dominant and the second with dominant arm; and D-N (n = 7) with dominant followed to non-dominant arm. All exercise sessions were carried out with 5 maximum sets with load equivalent to 10 RM. Exercise bouts were two weeks apart. We measured muscle soreness, through visual analog scale (VAS), and serum CK activity before and 48, 96 h after each exercise bout. Arm dominance was determined by the hand used to write. Relative to results, the N-N control group display well documented serum CK activity and muscle soreness patterns; i.e., elevations after first bout followed by attenuation after the second bout ( These findings support there is a cross-transfer effect on perceived muscle soreness after a damaging exercise bout is influenced by the order of arm dominance usage, without having an effect on muscle damage marker. Cellular, mechanical, and neural adaptations (McHugh, Specifically, Starbuck and Eston ( Our results corroborates with the findings of Starbuck and Eston ( A limitation of the present study is that changes in muscle strength and range of motion (two other accepted EIMD markers) were not measured and future studies should include these variables. Additionally, the electromyographic data would have helped to improve the comprehension about the intricate relationship among neural adaptations, cross-transfer effect and RBE for dominant and non-dominant limbs. Nonetheless, even with these limitations the finding indicate the cross-transfer effect on perceived muscle soreness after a damaging exercise bout is influenced by the order of arm dominance usage. |