Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.

The study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue on static and dynamic postural stability after completing a mountain ultra-marathon. Twelve male athletes participated in the study. Postural stability was assessed before and immediately after the race. Static postural stability was evaluated on...

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Main Authors: Giuseppe Marcolin, Alessandro Grainer, Carlo Reggiani, Patrizia Bisiacchi, Giorgia Cona, Nicola Petrone, Antonio Paoli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4861257?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-5b391284066147e8b7350b22e86914152020-11-25T02:45:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01115e015508510.1371/journal.pone.0155085Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.Giuseppe MarcolinAlessandro GrainerCarlo ReggianiPatrizia BisiacchiGiorgia ConaNicola PetroneAntonio PaoliThe study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue on static and dynamic postural stability after completing a mountain ultra-marathon. Twelve male athletes participated in the study. Postural stability was assessed before and immediately after the race. Static postural stability was evaluated on a dynamometric platform with eyes opened (OE) and closed (CE). Dynamic postural stability was assessed with OE on an instrumented plate which allowed medio-lateral oscillations. Stabilometric data were affected by fatigue in the OE condition, concerning sway path velocity (p = 0.0006), sway area velocity (p = 0.0006), area of the confidence ellipse (p = 0.0016), maximal anterior-posterior (AP) (p = 0.0017) and medio-lateral (ML) (p = 0.0039) oscillations. In the CE condition the sway path velocity (p = 0.0334), the maximal ML oscillations (p = 0.0161) and the area of the confident ellipse (p = 0.0180) were also negatively influenced. Stabilogram diffusion analysis showed in the OE condition an increase of short-term diffusion coefficients considering the anterior-posterior direction (Dfys; p = 0.0023) and the combination of the two (Dfr2s; p = 0.0032). Equally, long term diffusion coefficients increased considering the anterior-posterior direction (Dfyl; p = 0.0093) and the combination of the two (Dfr2l; p = 0.0086). In CE condition greater values were detected for medio-lateral direction (Dfxl; p = 0.033), anterior-posterior direction (Dfyl; p = 0.0459) and the combination of the two (Dfr2l; p = 0.0048). The dynamic postural stability test showed an increase of the time spent with the edges of the plate on the floor (p = 0.0152). Our results showed that mountain ultra-marathon altered static stability more than dynamic stability. An involvement of cognitive resources to monitor postural stability after fatiguing could be the explanation of the worsening in the automatic task (quiet standing) and of the positive compensation in the less automatic task (dynamic standing on the instrumented plate).http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4861257?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giuseppe Marcolin
Alessandro Grainer
Carlo Reggiani
Patrizia Bisiacchi
Giorgia Cona
Nicola Petrone
Antonio Paoli
spellingShingle Giuseppe Marcolin
Alessandro Grainer
Carlo Reggiani
Patrizia Bisiacchi
Giorgia Cona
Nicola Petrone
Antonio Paoli
Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Giuseppe Marcolin
Alessandro Grainer
Carlo Reggiani
Patrizia Bisiacchi
Giorgia Cona
Nicola Petrone
Antonio Paoli
author_sort Giuseppe Marcolin
title Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
title_short Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
title_full Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
title_fullStr Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
title_full_unstemmed Static and Dynamic Postural Changes after a Mountain Ultra-Marathon of 80 km and 5500 D.
title_sort static and dynamic postural changes after a mountain ultra-marathon of 80 km and 5500 d.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue on static and dynamic postural stability after completing a mountain ultra-marathon. Twelve male athletes participated in the study. Postural stability was assessed before and immediately after the race. Static postural stability was evaluated on a dynamometric platform with eyes opened (OE) and closed (CE). Dynamic postural stability was assessed with OE on an instrumented plate which allowed medio-lateral oscillations. Stabilometric data were affected by fatigue in the OE condition, concerning sway path velocity (p = 0.0006), sway area velocity (p = 0.0006), area of the confidence ellipse (p = 0.0016), maximal anterior-posterior (AP) (p = 0.0017) and medio-lateral (ML) (p = 0.0039) oscillations. In the CE condition the sway path velocity (p = 0.0334), the maximal ML oscillations (p = 0.0161) and the area of the confident ellipse (p = 0.0180) were also negatively influenced. Stabilogram diffusion analysis showed in the OE condition an increase of short-term diffusion coefficients considering the anterior-posterior direction (Dfys; p = 0.0023) and the combination of the two (Dfr2s; p = 0.0032). Equally, long term diffusion coefficients increased considering the anterior-posterior direction (Dfyl; p = 0.0093) and the combination of the two (Dfr2l; p = 0.0086). In CE condition greater values were detected for medio-lateral direction (Dfxl; p = 0.033), anterior-posterior direction (Dfyl; p = 0.0459) and the combination of the two (Dfr2l; p = 0.0048). The dynamic postural stability test showed an increase of the time spent with the edges of the plate on the floor (p = 0.0152). Our results showed that mountain ultra-marathon altered static stability more than dynamic stability. An involvement of cognitive resources to monitor postural stability after fatiguing could be the explanation of the worsening in the automatic task (quiet standing) and of the positive compensation in the less automatic task (dynamic standing on the instrumented plate).
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4861257?pdf=render
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