عنوان به زبان ديگر :
Effects of fatigue on frontal plane knee motion, muscle activity, and ground reaction forces in men and women during landing
چكيده لاتين :
Women tear their Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) 2-8 times
more frequently than men. Frontal plane knee motion can produce
a pathological load in the ACL. During a state of fatigue
the muscles surrounding the knee joint may lose the ability to
protect the joint during sudden deceleration while landing. The
purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of fatigue and
gender on frontal plane knee motion, EMG amplitudes, and
GRF magnitudes during drop-jump landing. Pretest-posttest
comparison group design was used. Twenty-six volunteers (14
women; 12 Men; Mean ± standard deviation age = 24.5 ± 2.7
yrs; height = 1.73 ± 0.09 m; mass = 74.3 ± 11.8 kg) participated
in the study. Knee frontal plane ranges of motion and positions,
ground reaction force peak magnitudes, and surface EMG RMS
amplitudes from five lower extremity muscles (vastus medialis,
vastus lateralis, medial hamstring, lateral hamstring, and lateral
gastrocnemius) were obtained during the landing phase of a
drop-jump. MANOVA and ANOVA indicated that peak GRF
significantly (p < 0.05; 2.50 ± 0.75 BW vs. 2.06 ± 0.93 BW)
decreased during fatigued landings. No other variables exhibited
a fatigue main effect, although there was a significant (p < 0.05)
fatigue by gender interaction for the frontal plane range of motion
from initial contact to max knee flexion variable. Follow-up
analyses failed to reveal significant gender differences at the
different levels of fatigue for this variable. Additionally, no
variables exhibited a significant gender main effect. Single
subject analysis indicated that fatigue significantly altered frontal
plane knee motion, peak GRF, and EMG in some subjects
and the direction of differences varied by individual. Fatigue
altered some aspects of landing performance in both men and
women, but there were no gender differences. Additionally, both
group and single subject analyses provided valuable but different
information about factors representing neuromuscular control
during drop-jump landing.