- 著者
- 
             
             Yali Feng
             
             Ying Yin
             
             Xuemei Zhao
             
             Yue Zhang
             
             Yi Zhou
             
             Zonghui Wu
             
          
- 出版者
- The Society of Physical Therapy Science
- 雑誌
- Journal of Physical Therapy Science (ISSN:09155287)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.34, no.10, pp.657-667, 2022 (Released:2022-10-01)
- 参考文献数
- 42
- 被引用文献数
- 
             
             
             3
             
             
          
        
        [Purpose] To assess the current state-of-the-art and the prevailing trends regarding the          global use of blood flow restriction (BFR) in the past 20 years. [Participants and          Methods] We retrieved literature relating to BFR from 1999 to 2020 using Web of Science.          We conducted a bibliometric analysis of countries/institutions, cited journals,          authors/cited authors, cited references, and keywords using CiteSpace. An analysis of          counts and centrality was used to examine publication output, countries/institutions, core          journals, active authors, foundation references, hot topics, and frontiers. [Results]          Seven hundred seventy five references were included and the total number of publications          has been continually increasing over the investigated period. Representatives of important          academic groups are the Japanese scholars from the University of Tokyo as represented by          Takashi Abe. Jeremy Paul Loenneke’s article (centrality: 0.15) was the most representative          and symbolic reference with the highest centrality. The three topics identified were          intervention (intensity resistance exercise, IRE), physiology (ischemia and muscular          function) and behavior (adaptation and increase). The four frontier topics were          phosphorylation, reduction, low intensity and arterial occlusion. [Conclusion] This study          provides an insight into BFR and offers valuable information for BFR researchers to          identify new perspectives for potential cooperation with collaborators and their related          cooperative institutions.