A Useful Blood Flow Restriction Training Risk Stratification for Exercise and Rehabilitation
Frontiers in Physiology · 2022 · Vol 13 · 808622
Dr. Nicholas Rolnick · Co-first author
Abstract
Blood flow restriction training (BFRT) is a modality with growing interest in the last decade and has been recognized as a critical tool in rehabilitation medicine, athletic and clinical populations. Besides its potential for positive benefits, BFRT has the capability to induce adverse responses. BFRT may evoke increased blood pressure, abnormal cardiovascular responses and impact vascular health. Furthermore, some important concerns with the use of BFRT exists for individuals with established cardiovascular disease (e.g., hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and chronic kidney disease patients). In addition, considering the potential risks of thrombosis promoted by BFRT in medically compromised populations, BFRT use warrants caution for patients that already display impaired blood coagulability, loss of antithrombotic mechanisms in the vessel wall, and stasis caused by immobility (e.g., COVID-19 patients, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, chronic kidney disease, cardiovascular disease, orthopedic post-surgery, anabolic steroid and ergogenic substance users, rheumatoid arthritis, and pregnant/postpartum women). To avoid untoward outcomes and ensure that BFRT is properly used, efficacy endpoints such as a questionnaire for risk stratification involving a review of the patient's medical history, signs, and symptoms indicative of underlying pathology is strongly advised. Here we present a model for BFRT pre-participation screening to theoretically reduce risk by excluding people with comorbidities or medically complex histories that could unnecessarily heighten intra- and/or post-exercise occurrence of adverse events. We propose this risk stratification tool as a framework to allow clinicians to use their knowledge, skills and expertise to assess and manage any risks related to the delivery of an appropriate BFRT exercise program. The questionnaires for risk stratification are adapted to guide clinicians for the referral, assessment, and suggestion of other modalities/approaches if/when necessary. Finally, the risk stratification might serve as a guideline for clinical protocols and future randomized controlled trial studies.
Authors
Dahan da Cunha Nascimento, Nicholas Rolnick, Ivo Vieira de Sousa Neto, Richard Severin, Fabiani Lage Rodrigues Beal
Dr. Nicholas Rolnick’s contribution: Co-first author
Keywords
- Assessment
- Risk assessment
- Risk factors
- Kaatsu
- Blood Flow Restriction
Read the full paper
Cite this paper
Dahan da Cunha Nascimento, Nicholas Rolnick, Ivo Vieira de Sousa Neto, Richard Severin, Fabiani Lage Rodrigues Beal. (2022). A Useful Blood Flow Restriction Training Risk Stratification for Exercise and Rehabilitation. Frontiers in Physiology, 13, 808622. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.808622
Related research
More from this line of work
Journal article · 2026
Autoregulation during blood flow restricted exercise offers no additional benefit on thigh muscle hypertrophy and strength adaptations in trained participants: a randomized within-subject 8-week trial
Read the record
Journal article · 2026
Editorial: Impact of blood flow restriction device features and methodological considerations on acute- and longitudinal responses to blood flow restricted exercise
Read the record
Journal article · 2025
Challenges in upright limb occlusion pressure determination with the Delfi PTS: pilot data from two independent cohorts
Read the record
Apply the research
From the paper to the patient
Every protocol in The Complete BFR Certification cites the literature it came from, including this line of work. The module-by-module bibliography (Bonus 5) maps each claim back to its paper.

