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The Effects of 10-Week Strength Training in the Winter on Brown-like Adipose Tissue Vascular Density.

Riki TanakaSayuri Fuse-HamaokaMiyuki KuroiwaYuko KurosawaTasuki EndoRyotaro KimeTakeshi YoneshiroTakafumi Hamaoka
Published in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
There is no evidence of the effect of exercise training on human brown-like adipose tissue vascular density (BAT-d). Here, we report whether whole-body strength training (ST) in a cold environment increased BAT-d. The participants were 18 men aged 20-31 years. They were randomly assigned to two groups: one that performed ST twice a week at 75% intensity of one-repetition maximum for 10 weeks during winter (EX; n = 9) and a control group that did not perform ST (CT; n = 9). The total hemoglobin concentration in the supraclavicular region determined by time-resolved near-infrared spectroscopy was used as a parameter of BAT-d. ST volume (T vol ) was defined as the mean of the weight × repetition × sets of seven training movements. The number of occasions where the room temperature was lower than the median (NR cold ) was counted as an index of potential cold exposure during ST. There was no significant between-group difference in BAT-d. Multiple regression analysis using body mass index, body fat percentage, NR cold, and T vol as independent variables revealed that NR cold and T vol were determined as predictive of changes in BAT-d. An appropriate combination of ST with cold environments could be an effective strategy for modulating BAT.
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