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Experimental knee joint pain during strength training and muscle strength gain in healthy subjects: A randomized controlled trial

✍ Scribed by T. J. Sørensen; H. Langberg; P. W. Hodges; H. Bliddal; M. Henriksen


Publisher
Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
216 KB
Volume
64
Category
Article
ISSN
2151-464X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

Knee joint pain and reduced quadriceps strength are cardinal symptoms in many knee pathologies. In people with painful knee pathologies, quadriceps exercise reduces pain, improves physical function, and increases muscle strength. A general assumption is that pain compromises muscle function and thus may prevent effective rehabilitation. This study evaluated the effects of experimental knee joint pain during quadriceps strength training on muscle strength gain in healthy individuals.

Methods

Twenty‐seven healthy untrained volunteers participated in a randomized controlled trial of quadriceps strengthening (3 times per week for 8 weeks). Participants were randomized to perform resistance training either during pain induced by injections of painful hypertonic saline (pain group, n = 13) or during a nonpainful control condition with injection of isotonic saline (control group, n = 14) into the infrapatellar fat pad. The primary outcome measure was change in maximal isokinetic muscle strength in knee extension/flexion (60, 120, and 180 degrees/second).

Results

The group who exercised with pain had a significantly larger improvement in isokinetic muscle strength at all angular velocities of knee extension compared to the control group. In knee flexion there were improvements in isokinetic muscle strength in both groups with no between‐group differences.

Conclusion

Experimental knee joint pain improved the training‐induced gain in muscle strength following 8 weeks of quadriceps training. It remains to be studied whether knee joint pain has a positive effect on strength gain in patients with knee pathology.


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