School of Health Science, Charles Darwin University , Australia.
School of Human Movement Studies, University of Queensland , Australia.
J Sports Sci Med. 2004 Mar 1;3(1):16-22. eCollection 2004 Mar.
At present there appears to be a need for research conducted on the effects of vibration on the contractile ability of skeletal muscle tissue. The aim of this study was to address this issue by examining the effects of a superimposed muscle/tendon vibration at 50.42±1.16 Hz (acceleration 13.24 ± 0.18ms(-2): displacement ≈5mm) on muscular activation and maximal isometric contraction. Sixteen participants with a mean age, body mass, and height of 22 ± 4.4 years, 73.2 ± 11.7 kg and 173.1 ± 9.7 cms, respectively, were recruited for this study. Electromyography and accelerometry from the rectus femoris, and maximal isometric force data characteristics were collected from the dominant limb under conditions of vibration, and no-vibration. A superimposed 50 Hz vibration was used during the contraction phase for the maximal isometric leg extension for the condition of vibration. A one-way ANOVA revealed no significant (p > 0.05) differences between the vibration and no-vibration conditions for peak normalized EMGRMS (84.74% Vs 88.1%) values. An ANOVA revealed significant (p > 0.05) differences between the peak fundamental frequencies of the FFT between the conditions vibration (27.1 ± 12.2 Hz) and no-vibration (9.8 ± 3.5 Hz). Peak isometric force, peak rate of force development, rate of force development at times 0.05, 0.01, 0.1, 0.5 seconds, and rate of force development at 50, 75, and 90% of peak force were not significantly different. The results of this study suggest that the application of vibration stimulation at 50 Hz during the contraction does not contribute to muscle activation, or enhance force production for maximal isometric contractions. Key PointsThe application of a vibratory stimulation to the human body increases the normal acceleration resulting in an increase in force and a change in performanceThis study was to address this issue by examining the effects of a direct superimposed muscle/tendon vibration at 50 Hz on isometric strength characteristicsNo improvement or change in isometric force or rate of force developmentNo changes to peak normalized EMGRMS values.
目前,似乎需要研究振动对骨骼肌组织收缩能力的影响。本研究的目的是通过检查在 50.42±1.16 Hz(加速度 13.24 ± 0.18ms(-2):位移≈5mm)叠加的肌肉/肌腱振动对肌肉激活和最大等长收缩的影响来解决这个问题。这项研究招募了 16 名参与者,他们的平均年龄、体重和身高分别为 22±4.4 岁、73.2±11.7kg 和 173.1±9.7cms。这项研究从股直肌收集肌电图和加速度计以及最大等长力数据特征,在振动和无振动条件下从优势肢体收集。在振动条件下,最大等长腿部伸展的收缩阶段使用叠加的 50Hz 振动。单向方差分析显示,振动和无振动条件下的峰值归一化 EMGRMS(84.74%与 88.1%)值之间没有显著差异(p>0.05)。方差分析显示,振动条件下的 FFT 峰值基频(27.1±12.2Hz)与无振动条件下的基频(9.8±3.5Hz)之间存在显著差异(p>0.05)。最大等长力、最大力发展速率、0.05、0.01、0.1、0.5 秒时的力发展速率以及 50%、75%和 90%的最大力时的力发展速率均无显著差异。这项研究的结果表明,在收缩期间应用 50Hz 的振动刺激不会导致肌肉激活或增强最大等长收缩时的力产生。关键点人体应用振动刺激会增加正常加速度,从而增加力量并改变性能。本研究旨在通过检查直接叠加在 50Hz 肌肉/肌腱上的振动对等长强度特性的影响来解决这个问题。等长力或力发展速率没有改善或变化。峰值归一化 EMGRMS 值没有变化。