Leyk D, Gorges W, Ridder D, Wunderlich M, Rüther T, Sievert A, Essfeld D
Department IV-Military Ergonomics and Exercise Physiology, Central Institute of the Federal Armed Forces Medical Services Koblenz, Andernacher Strasse 100, 56070, Koblenz, Germany.
Eur J Appl Physiol. 2007 Mar;99(4):415-21. doi: 10.1007/s00421-006-0351-1. Epub 2006 Dec 22.
Hand-grip strength has been identified as one limiting factor for manual lifting and carrying loads. To obtain epidemiologically relevant hand-grip strength data for pre-employment screening, we determined maximal isometric hand-grip strength in 1,654 healthy men and 533 healthy women aged 20-25 years. Moreover, to assess the potential margins for improvement in hand-grip strength of women by training, we studied 60 highly trained elite female athletes from sports known to require high hand-grip forces (judo, handball). Maximal isometric hand-grip force was recorded over 15 s using a handheld hand-grip ergometer. Biometric parameters included lean body mass (LBM) and hand dimensions. Mean maximal hand-grip strength showed the expected clear difference between men (541 N) and women (329 N). Less expected was the gender related distribution of hand-grip strength: 90% of females produced less force than 95% of males. Though female athletes were significantly stronger (444 N) than their untrained female counterparts, this value corresponded to only the 25th percentile of the male subjects. Hand-grip strength was linearly correlated with LBM. Furthermore, both relative hand-grip strength parameters (F (max)/body weight and F (max)/LBM) did not show any correlation to hand dimensions. The present findings show that the differences in hand-grip strength of men and women are larger than previously reported. An appreciable difference still remains when using lean body mass as reference. The results of female national elite athletes even indicate that the strength level attainable by extremely high training will rarely surpass the 50th percentile of untrained or not specifically trained men.
握力已被确定为手工搬运和承载负荷的一个限制因素。为了获取用于入职前筛查的具有流行病学相关性的握力数据,我们测定了1654名年龄在20至25岁之间的健康男性和533名健康女性的最大等长握力。此外,为了评估通过训练提高女性握力的潜在幅度,我们研究了60名来自已知需要高握力的运动项目(柔道、手球)的训练有素的精英女运动员。使用手持式握力测力计在15秒内记录最大等长握力。生物特征参数包括瘦体重(LBM)和手部尺寸。平均最大握力显示出男性(541牛)和女性(329牛)之间预期的明显差异。不太预期的是握力与性别的相关分布:90%的女性产生的力量小于95%的男性。尽管女运动员比未受过训练的女性同龄人明显更强壮(444牛),但这个值仅相当于男性受试者的第25百分位数。握力与瘦体重呈线性相关。此外,两个相对握力参数(F(max)/体重和F(max)/LBM)与手部尺寸均无相关性。目前的研究结果表明,男性和女性握力的差异比之前报道的更大。以瘦体重作为参考时,仍存在明显差异。女性国家精英运动员的结果甚至表明,通过极高强度训练所能达到的力量水平很少能超过未受过训练或未经过专门训练的男性的第50百分位数。