Effects of knee joint angles and fatigue on the neuromuscular control of vastus medialis oblique and vastus lateralis muscle in humans

AYF Chan, FLL Lee, PK Wong, CYM Wong… - European journal of …, 2001 - Springer
AYF Chan, FLL Lee, PK Wong, CYM Wong, SS Yeung
European journal of applied physiology, 2001Springer
The effects of different knee joint angles and fatigue on the neuromuscular control of the
vastus medialis oblique (VMO) and vastus lateralis (VL) muscles were investigated in 17 (11
men, 6 women) young subjects. The electromyogram (EMG) activities and the force
generation capacities were monitored before and after a fatigue protocol at three different
knee joint angles, 90°, 150°, 175° of knee extension, on three occasions. In response to
randomly triggered light signals, the subjects performed three isometric maximal voluntary …
Abstract
The effects of different knee joint angles and fatigue on the neuromuscular control of the vastus medialis oblique (VMO) and vastus lateralis (VL) muscles were investigated in 17 (11 men, 6 women) young subjects. The electromyogram (EMG) activities and the force generation capacities were monitored before and after a fatigue protocol at three different knee joint angles, 90°, 150°, 175° of knee extension, on three occasions. In response to randomly triggered light signals, the subjects performed three isometric maximal voluntary contraction (IMVC) that lasted for 4 to 8 s. This was then followed by the fatigue protocol which consisted of six bursts of contractions fixed at 30 s on and 10 s off. Immediately after the exercise to fatigue, the subjects performed another three IMVC in response to the light signals. Repeated measures ANOVA were performed to examine the effects of fatigue at these three positions on the electromechanical delay (EMD), median frequency (f med), peak force (F peak) and root mean square (rms)-EMG:F peak quotient of VMO and VL. The results revealed a significant effect of the three knee joint angles on the EMD before the fatigue (P < 0.05). The fatigue protocol induced a significant decrease in F peak at all the three positions (P < 0.01). However, the fatigue induced a significant decrease of f med at only 90° and 150° of knee extension (P < 0.01). This occurred in parallel with the lengthening of EMD at these two joint angles (P < 0.01 and P < 0.05). The effects of fatigue on the f med and EMD were not significant between VMO and VL at all three angles. The insignificant difference in f med and EMD between VMO and VL at the three knee positions before and after fatigue indicated that no preferential onset activation between VMO and VL had occurred.
Springer
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果