肌肉疲劳
物理医学与康复
人事变更率
肌肉收缩
收缩(语法)
振幅
医学
心脏病学
物理疗法
内科学
物理
肌电图
量子力学
经济
管理
作者
Gennaro Boccia,Davide Dardanello,Paolo Riccardo Brustio,Cantor Tarperi,Luca Festa,Chiara Zoppirolli,Barbara Pellegrini,Federico Schena,Alberto Rainoldi
标识
DOI:10.3389/fphys.2018.01503
摘要
The effect of muscle fatigue on rate of force development (RFD) is usually assessed during tasks that require participants to reach as quickly as possible maximal or near-maximal force. However, endurance sports require athletes to quickly produce force of submaximal, rather than maximal, amplitudes. Thus, this study investigated the effect of muscle fatigue induced by long-distance running on the capacity to quickly produce submaximal levels of force. Twenty-one male amateur runners were evaluated before and shortly after a half-marathon race. Knee extensors force was recorded under maximal voluntary and electrically evoked contractions. Moreover, a series of ballistic contractions at different submaximal amplitudes (from 20% to 100% of maximal voluntary force) were obtained, by asking the participants to reach submaximal forces as fast as possible. The RFD was calculated for each contraction. After the race, maximal voluntary activation, resting doublet twitch, maximal force, and RFD during maximal contraction decreased (-12, -12, -21, and -19%, respectively, all P values 0.4). Long-distance running impaired the capacity to quickly produce force in ballistic contractions of maximal, but not of submaximal, amplitudes. Overall, these findings suggest that central and peripheral fatigue do not affect the quickness to which muscle contracts across a wide range of submaximal forces. This is a relevant finding for running and other daily life activities that rely on the production of rapid submaximal contractions rather than maximal force levels.
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