Journal of strength and conditioning research
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J Strength Cond Res · Mar 2010
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyAcute effects of Flexi-bar vs. Sham-bar exercise on muscle electromyography activity and performance.
This study was conducted to investigate whether the low-frequency (5-Hz) oscillatory vibration-like stimulus, purported to be delivered by exercising with Flexi-bar, acutely affects muscle activation and maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) force. Nine healthy men participated in 2 trials, separated by at least 1 week, during which 4 x 30-second sets of exercise were performed with either the Flexi bar or a Sham bar. Maximal voluntary contraction force for elbow flexion, elbow extension, and knee extension were measured before and after the exercise. ⋯ Knee extension MVC force significantly decreased after Flexi-bar exercise (-3 +/- 7%, p = 0.048) in parallel with reduced RF EMG amplitude (-8 +/- 5%, p = 0.04), but there were no acute residual effects on elbow flexion/extension MVC or arm and VL EMG muscle activity. Using Flexi bar during exercise provoked acute alterations in arm- and leg-muscle EMG parameters and maximum force-generating capacity, indicating greater fatigue development than when exercising with the Sham bar. The results of this study indicate that Flexi bar may therefore be used to impose a stronger training stimulus on the muscle during submaximal exercise.
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J Strength Cond Res · Mar 2010
The reliability and validity of handheld dynamometry for the measurement of lower-extremity muscle strength in older adults.
Lower-extremity muscle strength is important in predicting fall risk in older adults. Handheld dynamometry (HHD) is a tool used to measure isometric muscle strength in the older adult, but few studies have evaluated the utility of HHD for muscle groups beyond knee extension. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the reliability of HHD at the hip, knee, and ankle and to compare HHD strength values to other isometric dynamometry (ID) and to balance and recovery in older adults. ⋯ Hip and knee strength was positively associated to step length and reaction time but not to balance (r = 0.40-0.71; p < 0.05). In conclusion, HHD is a reliable and valid assessment tool for measuring strength at the hip and knee in older adults, and greater strength in these muscles is associated with longer step length and decreased reaction time, which are important components of balance recovery in older adults. HHD can be used as an effective strength measurement tool for the older adult population.