Relationship between perceptual and mechanical markers of fatigue during bench press and bench pull exercises: impact of inter-set rest period length
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Janicijevic, Danica; Miras Moreno, Sergio; Morenas Aguilar, María Dolores; Jiménez Martínez, Pablo; Alix Fages, Carlos; García Ramos, AmadorEditorial
PeerJ
Materia
Fatigue Resistance training RPE
Date
2024-01-17Referencia bibliográfica
Janicijevic D, Miras-Moreno S, Morenas-Aguilar MD, Jiménez-Martínez P, Alix-Fages C, García-Ramos A. 2024. Relationship between perceptual and mechanical markers of fatigue during bench press and bench pull exercises: impact of inter-set rest period length. PeerJ 12:e16754 DOI 10.7717/peerj.16754
Abstract
This study aimed to explore whether the relationship between perceptual (rating of
perceived exertion; RPE) and mechanical (maximal number of repetitions completed
[MNR], fastest set velocity, and mean velocity decline) variables is affected by the
length of inter-set rest periods during resistance training sets not leading to failure.
Twenty-three physically active individuals (15 men and eight women) randomly
completed 12 testing sessions resulting from the combination of two exercises (bench
press and bench pull), three inter-set rest protocols (1, 3, and 5 min), and two
minimal velocity thresholds (farther from muscular failure [MVT0.45 for bench press
and MVT0.65 for bench pull] and closer to muscular failure [MVT0.35 for bench press
and MVT0.55 for bench pull]). The duration of inter-set rest periods did not have a
significant impact on RPE values (p ranged from 0.061 to 0.951). Higher proximities
to failure, indicated by lower MVTs, were associated with increased RPE values
(p < 0.05 in 19 out of 24 comparisons). Moreover, as the number of sets increased, an
upward trend in RPE values was observed (p < 0.05 in seven out of 12 comparisons).
Finally, while acknowledging some inconsistencies, it was generally observed that
higher magnitudes of the mechanical variables, especially MNR (rs < −0.55 in three
out of four comparisons), were associated with lower RPE values. These results,
which were comparable for the bench press and bench pull exercises, suggest that
post-set RPE values are affected by the fatigue experienced at both the beginning and
end of the set.