Blood Flow Restriction (BFR) Works in Broad Cuff Pressure Range: Lower (40%) & Higher (80% AOP) Similarly Effective
"Go super tight or go home"? Nope, we're not talking 'bout NC-17 rated websites... this provocatively phrased statement about how to wear your #BFR cuffs at the gym is probably as faulty as the notion that you can judge the effectivity of a workout by how much it hurts. |
That's not just potentially dangerous but, as a recent study from the Brigham Young University in UT suggests, it's also unnecessary.
"Blood Flow Restriction" aka #BFR is becoming more and more popular - rightly so?
Will lower cuff pressures provide an ischemic stimulus comparable to higher pressures?
The relationship between blood flow and cuff pressure at rest was determined by measuring blood flow (Doppler Ultrasound) through the superficial femoral artery (SFA) in 23 adults across a range of pressures (0-100% Arterial Occlusion Pressure at rest, rAOP vs. eAOP which denotes testing during exercise, i.e. plantar flexion exercise).
Figure 1: Overview of the study design; the exercise was basically "calf training" (Crossley 2019). |
...you can well apply more than 40% of the arterial pressure to the cuff and still won't see much more actual blood flow occlusion than at this rather moderate level.
Ok, the blood flow wasn't 100% identical but the differences were - within the statistical and experimental margins of error so small that you will not be able to argue based on Figure that they were statistically significant (in fact, p = 1.0) different when he external pressure was increased from 40 to 80% of the previously determined rAOP.
According to the results of a 2017 study by Mouser et al. cuff width and other differences in your gear are less important than you'd think - assuming you achieve the 'correct' aortic pressure reduction. |
...the real-world blood pressure building up in the arteria was 20% higher when the subjects exercised compared to the sedentary condition.
The actual blood flow [the amount of blood per minute] did "not significantly differ (P=0.49) between 40% rAOP or 40% eAOP". This means that the resting vs. exercise condition at a given external cuff pressure of 40% of the pre-determined e- and rAOP were identical. From a mechanistic standpoint it is likely that the greater pressure normalizes the amount of blood that's bypassing your calves and reaching your feet to what previous research suggested to be "optimal" levels, i.e. 60-70% of the unrestricted blood flow (~ 70-80 ml/min vs. 120 ml/min without cuff) whenever you apply cuffs at a pressure in what I deemed following the use of the phrase in astronomy the "goldilocks zone" (cf. Figure 2, green mark-up).
Figure 2: Blood flow through the superficial femoral artery at different cuff pressures as %-age of resting Arterial Occlusion Pressure (rAOP); mind the non-linear plateau in the "goldilocks zone" (my term added to Crossley 2019) |
If you don't remember my 2016 article about combining #BFR and #regularResistanceTraining it's about time to find it up in the archive. |
Ah, and yes. The above conclusion depends on the assumption that the reduced blood flow, alone, and not a potential extra increase in blood pressure or other cuff-induced "collateral damage" drives the effects of #BFR training on muscle gainz.
- Crossley, Kent W., et al. "Effect of Cuff Pressure on Blood Flow during Blood Flow–restricted Rest and Exercise." Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise (2019). Ahead of print.
- Mouser, J. Grant, et al. "A tale of three cuffs: the hemodynamics of blood flow restriction." European journal of applied physiology 117.7 (2017): 1493-1499.