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Letter / commentary

Why blood flow restriction cuff features are an important methodological consideration- a short commentary on 'cerebral cortex activation and functional connectivity during low-load resistance training with blood flow restriction: an fNIRS study'

Frontiers in physiology · 2024 · Vol 15 · 1482816

Dr. Nicholas Rolnick · First author

About this publication

"Why blood flow restriction cuff features are an important methodological consideration- a short commentary on 'cerebral cortex activation and functional connectivity during low-load resistance training with blood flow restriction: an fNIRS study'" is a letter or commentary published in Frontiers in physiology (2024). A full abstract is not available for this entry in open databases; the complete record is available through the links below.

Citation-only entry. Letter / commentary abstracts of this kind are often not posted to open databases; the full record is linked below.

Authors

Nicholas Rolnick, Matthew Clarkson, Luke Hughes, Vasileios Korakakis, Victor De Queiros, Stephen D Patterson, Samuel Buckner, Tim Werner, Dahan Da Cunha Nascimento, Sten Stray-Gundersen, Okan Kamiş, Mathias Thoelen, Kyle Kimbrell, Ewoud Jacobs

Dr. Nicholas Rolnick’s contribution: First author

Keywords

  • BFR training
  • arterial occlusion pressure
  • commentary
  • limb occlusion pressure
  • multi-chambered design

Cite this paper

Nicholas Rolnick, Matthew Clarkson, Luke Hughes, Vasileios Korakakis, Victor De Queiros, Stephen D Patterson, Samuel Buckner, Tim Werner, Dahan Da Cunha Nascimento, Sten Stray-Gundersen, Okan Kamiş, Mathias Thoelen, Kyle Kimbrell, Ewoud Jacobs. (2024). Why blood flow restriction cuff features are an important methodological consideration- a short commentary on 'cerebral cortex activation and functional connectivity during low-load resistance training with blood flow restriction: an fNIRS study'. Frontiers in physiology, 15, 1482816. https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2024.1482816

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