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      Effects of inspiratory muscle training on exercise responses in Paralympic athletes with cervical spinal cord injury.

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          Abstract

          We asked whether specific inspiratory muscle training (IMT) improves respiratory structure and function and peak exercise responses in highly trained athletes with cervical spinal cord injury (SCI). Ten Paralympic wheelchair rugby players with motor-complete SCI (C5-C7) were paired by functional classification then randomly assigned to an IMT or placebo group. Diaphragm thickness (B-mode ultrasonography), respiratory function [spirometry and maximum static inspiratory (PI ,max ) and expiratory (PE ,max ) pressures], chronic activity-related dyspnea (Baseline and Transition Dyspnea Indices), and physiological responses to incremental arm-crank exercise were assessed before and after 6 weeks of pressure threshold IMT or sham bronchodilator treatment. Compared to placebo, the IMT group showed significant increases in diaphragm thickness (P = 0.001) and PI ,max (P = 0.016). There was a significant increase in tidal volume at peak exercise in IMT vs placebo (P = 0.048) and a strong trend toward an increase in peak work rate (P = 0.081, partial eta-squared = 0.33) and peak oxygen uptake (P = 0.077, partial eta-squared = 0.34). No other indices changed post-intervention. In conclusion, IMT resulted in significant diaphragmatic hypertrophy and increased inspiratory muscle strength in highly trained athletes with cervical SCI. The strong trend, with large observed effect, toward an increase in peak aerobic performance suggests IMT may provide a useful adjunct to training in this population.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Scand J Med Sci Sports
          Scandinavian journal of medicine & science in sports
          Wiley
          1600-0838
          0905-7188
          Oct 2014
          : 24
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Centre for Sports Medicine and Human Performance, Brunel University, Uxbridge, UK.
          Article
          10.1111/sms.12070
          23530708
          51b6fcac-0242-4d53-b880-7c904dca4645
          History

          respiratory,upper-body exercise,wheelchair sport,diaphragm,tetraplegia

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