Paula Zaffari
Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul
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Publication
Featured researches published by Paula Zaffari.
International Journal of Sports Medicine | 2013
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Cristine Lima Alberton; Paula Zaffari; Natália Carvalho Bagatini; Bruno Manfredini Baroni; Regis Radaelli; Fábio Juner Lanferdini; J. C. Colado; Ronei Silveira Pinto; Marco Aurélio Vaz; Martim Bottaro; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
The aim was to investigate the effects of the intra-session exercise order during water-based concurrent training on the neuromuscular adaptations in young women. 26 women (25.1±2.9 years) were placed into 2 groups: resistance prior to (RA) or after (AR) aerobic training. Subjects performed resistance (sets at maximal effort) and aerobic training (exercises at heart rate corresponding to the second ventilatory threshold) twice a week over 12 weeks, performing both exercise types in the same training session. Upper (elbow flexion) and lower-body (knee extension) one-repetition maximum test (1RM) and peak torque (PT) were evaluated. The muscle thickness (MT) of upper (sum of MT of biceps brachii and brachialis) and lower-body (sum of MT of vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, vastus intermedius, and rectus femoris) was determined by ultrasonography. Moreover, the maximal electromyographic activity (EMG) of upper (biceps brachii) and lower-body (sum of EMG of vastus lateralis and rectus femoris) was measured. Both RA and AR groups increased the upper and lower-body 1RM and PT, while the lower-body 1RM increases observed in the RA was greater than AR (43.58±14.00 vs. 27.01±18.05%). RA and AR showed MT increases in all muscles evaluated, while the lower-body MT increases observed in the RA were also greater than AR (10.24±3.11 vs. 5.76±1.88%). There were increases in the maximal EMG of upper and lower-body in both RA and AR, with no differences between groups. Performing resistance prior to aerobic exercise during water-based concurrent training seems to optimize the lower-body strength and hypertrophy.
Women & Health | 2014
Felipe B. Schuch; Stephanie Santana Pinto; Natália Carvalho Bagatini; Paula Zaffari; Cristine Lima Alberton; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Rodrigo Ferrari da Silva; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Several studieshave evaluated the relation of exercise to quality of life (QoL). To our knowledge, no study has evaluated the relation of water-based exercise to depressive symptoms and QoL, or the association between improvement in QoL and depressive symptoms in healthy women. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the association of water-based exercise with changes in QoL. Forty-seven women performed water-based combined exercise for 12 weeks. All participants improved in the physical and psychological domains of QoL. Decreases in depressive symptoms and improvements in maximal strength and aerobic capacity were found for all participants. A regression model revealed that depressive symptoms were associated with improvements in physical and psychological domains of QoL. The results showed that moderate intensity, water-based exercise improved physical and psychological domains of QoL, depressive symptoms, aerobic capacity, and muscular strength of women. Furthermore, the improvement in physical and psychological domains of QoL appeared to be mediated by the antidepressant effects of exercise, but not by changes in aerobic capacity or muscular strength.
Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport | 2015
Amanda Haberland Antunes; Cristine Lima Alberton; Paula Finatto; Stephanie Santana Pinto; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Paula Zaffari; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Purpose: Maximal tests conducted on land are not suitable for the prescription of aquatic exercises, which makes it difficult to optimize the intensity of water aerobics classes. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the maximal and anaerobic threshold cardiorespiratory responses to 6 water aerobics exercises. Volunteers performed 3 of the exercises in the sagittal plane and 3 in the frontal plane. Method: Twelve active female volunteers (aged 24 ± 2 years) performed 6 maximal progressive test sessions. Throughout the exercise tests, we measured heart rate (HR) and oxygen consumption (VO2). We randomized all sessions with a minimum interval of 48 hr between each session. For statistical analysis, we used repeated-measures 1-way analysis of variance. Results: Regarding the maximal responses, for the peak VO2, abductor hop and jumping jacks (JJ) showed significantly lower values than frontal kick and cross-country skiing (CCS; p < .001; partial η2 = .509), while for the peak HR, JJ showed statistically significantly lower responses compared with stationary running and CCS (p < .001; partial η2 = .401). At anaerobic threshold intensity expressed as the percentage of the maximum values, no statistically significant differences were found among exercises. Conclusion: Cardiorespiratory responses are directly associated with the muscle mass involved in the exercise. Thus, it is worth emphasizing the importance of performing a maximal test that is specific to the analyzed exercise so the prescription of the intensity can be safer and valid.
Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research | 2015
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Cristine Lima Alberton; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Paula Zaffari; Bruno Manfredini Baroni; Fábio J. Lanferdini; Regis Radaelli; Patrícia Dias Pantoja; Leonardo Alexandre Peyré-Tartaruga; Maira Cristina Wolf Schoenell; Marco Aurélio Vaz; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Abstract Pinto, SS, Alberton, CL, Cadore, EL, Zaffari, P, Baroni, BM, Lanferdini, FJ, Radaelli, R, Pantoja, PD, Peyré-Tartaruga, LA, Wolf Schoenell, MC, Vaz, MA, and Kruel, LFM. Water-based concurrent training improves peak oxygen uptake, rate of force development, jump height, and neuromuscular economy in young women. J Strength Cond Res 29(7): 1846–1854, 2015—The study investigated the effects of different intrasession exercise sequences on the cardiorespiratory and neuromuscular adaptations induced by water-based concurrent training in young subjects. Twenty-six healthy young women (25.1 ± 2.9 years) were placed into 2 water-based concurrent training groups: resistance before (RA, n = 13) or after (AR, n = 13) aerobic training. Subjects trained resistance and aerobic training during 12 weeks, 2 times per week performing both exercise types in the same training session. Peak oxygen uptake (V[Combining Dot Above]O2peak), rate of force development (RFD) obtained during an isometric peak torque knee extension protocol, jump height, and neuromuscular economy (normalized electromyography at 80% of pretraining knee extension isometric peak torque) in young women were determined. After training, there was a significant increase (p < 0.001) in both RA and AR in the V[Combining Dot Above]O2peak, with no differences between groups (7 vs. 5%). The maximal isometric knee extension RFD showed significant increases (p = 0.003) after training (RA: 19 vs. AR: 30%), and both groups presented similar gains. In addition, the countermovement jump height also increased (p = 0.034) after training (RA: 5% vs. AR: 6%), with no difference between groups. After training, there were significant improvements on vastus lateralis (p < 0.001) (RA: −13% vs. AR: −20%) and rectus femoris (p = 0.025) (RA: −17% vs. AR: −7%) neuromuscular economy, with no difference between groups. In conclusion, 12 weeks of water-based concurrent training improved the peak oxygen uptake, RFD, jump height, and neuromuscular economy in young women independent from the intrasession exercise sequence.
Journal of Human Kinetics | 2015
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Cristine Lima Alberton; Paula Zaffari; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Ana Carolina Kanitz; Giane Veiga Liedtke; Marcus Peikriszwili Tartaruga; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Abstract The aim of the present study was to relate the overall rating of perceived exertion (RPE-overall) with cardiorespiratory and neuromuscular variables during stationary running with the elbow flexion/extension performed with water-floating equipment. The sample consisted of eleven women that performed the water-based exercise at submaximal cadences. The heart rate, oxygen uptake, ventilation, and electromyographic signal (EMG) from biceps brachii (%EMG BB), triceps brachii (%EMG TB), biceps femoris (%EMG BF) and rectus femoris (%EMG RF) muscles were measured during the exercise, and the overall RPE was measured immediately following its completion. The Pearson product-moment linear correlation was used to investigate associations between the variables analyzed in the present study. Significant relationships were observed between the RPE-overall and all the cardiorespiratory variables, with the r values ranging from 0.60 to 0.70 (p<0.05). In addition, the RPE-overall showed a significant (p<0.05) relationship with %EMG BB (r=0.55) and %EMG BF (r=0.50). These results suggest an association between the RPE-overall with all cardiorespiratory and two neuromuscular variables during the execution of a water-based aerobic exercise using water-floating equipment.
Age | 2015
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Cristine Lima Alberton; Natália Carvalho Bagatini; Paula Zaffari; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Regis Radaelli; Bruno Manfredini Baroni; Fábio J. Lanferdini; Rodrigo Ferrari; Ana Carolina Kanitz; Ronei Silveira Pinto; Marco Aurélio Vaz; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2015
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Bruno Manfredini Baroni; Cristine Lima Alberton; Natália Carvalho Bagatini; Paula Zaffari; Marco Aurélio Vaz; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Revista Brasileira de Atividade Física & Saúde | 2014
Bruna Pereira Almada; Ana Carolina Kanitz; Cristine Lima Alberton; Paula Zaffari; Stephanie Santana Pinto; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2014
Stephanie Santana Pinto; Paula Zaffari; Natália Carvalho Bagatini; Bruno Manfredini Baroni; Fábio Juner Lanferdini; Regis Radaelli; Patrícia Dias Pantoja; Leonardo Alexandre Peyré-Tartaruga; Maira Cristina Wolf Schoenell; Eduardo Lusa Cadore; Marco Aurélio Vaz; Luiz Fernando Martins Kruel
Archive | 2009
Guilherme Treis Trindade; Roberta Bgeginski; Cristine Lima Alberton; Amanda Haberland Antunes; Paula Zaffari; Mariah Gonçalves dos Santos; Paula Finatto; Mikaéli de Moura; Fabiana Fernandes Vaz; Stephanie Santana Pinto