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The
purpose of this study was to measure the salivary cortisol response
to different intensities of resistance exercise. In addition, we
wanted to determine the reliability of the session rating of perceived
exertion (RPE) scale to monitor resistance exercise intensity. Subjects
(8 men, 9 women) completed 2 trials of acute resistance training
bouts in a counterbalanced design. The high intensity resistance
exercise protocol consisted of six, ten-repetition sets using 75%
of one repetition maximum (RM) on a Smith machine squat and bench
press exercise (12 sets total). The low intensity resistance exercise
protocol consisted of three, ten-repetition sets at 30% of 1RM of
the same exercises as the high intensity protocol. Both exercise
bouts were performed with 2 minutes of rest between each exercise
and sessions were repeated to test reliability of the measures.
The order of the exercise bouts was randomized with least 72 hours
between each session. Saliva samples were obtained immediately before,
immediately after and 30 mins following each resistance exercise
bout. RPE measures were obtained using Borg's CR-10 scale following
each set. Also, the session RPE for the entire exercise session
was obtained 30 minutes following completion of the session. There
was a significant 97% increase in the level of salivary cortisol
immediately following the high intensity exercise session (P<0.05).
There was also a significant difference in salivary cortisol of
145% between the low intensity and high intensity exercise session
immediately post-exercise (P<0.05). The low intensity exercise did
not result in any significant changes in cortisol levels. There
was also a significant difference between the session RPE values
for the different intensity levels (high intensity 7.1 vs. low intensity
1.9) (P<0.05). The intraclass correlation coefficient for the session
RPE measure was 0.95. It was concluded that the session RPE method
is a valid and reliable method of quantifying resistance exercise
and that salivary cortisol responds promptly to the exercise load.
KEY
WORDS: Weight lifting, stress, endocrine effects.
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