Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.

The aim of this study was to identify adaptations in muscle activity distribution to spinal tissue creep in presence of muscle fatigue.Twenty-three healthy participants performed a fatigue task before and after 30 minutes of passive spinal tissue deformation in flexion. Right and left erector spinae...

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Main Authors: Jacques Abboud, François Nougarou, Martin Descarreaux
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2016-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4750977?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-bfeae6ab92804f1fa0244effd62acf152020-11-25T02:30:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032016-01-01112e014907610.1371/journal.pone.0149076Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.Jacques AbboudFrançois NougarouMartin DescarreauxThe aim of this study was to identify adaptations in muscle activity distribution to spinal tissue creep in presence of muscle fatigue.Twenty-three healthy participants performed a fatigue task before and after 30 minutes of passive spinal tissue deformation in flexion. Right and left erector spinae activity was recorded using large-arrays surface electromyography (EMG). To characterize muscle activity distribution, dispersion was used. During the fatigue task, EMG amplitude root mean square (RMS), median frequency and dispersion in x- and y-axis were compared before and after spinal creep.Important fatigue-related changes in EMG median frequency were observed during muscle fatigue. Median frequency values showed a significant main creep effect, with lower median frequency values on the left side under the creep condition (p≤0.0001). A significant main creep effect on RMS values was also observed as RMS values were higher after creep deformation on the right side (p = 0.014); a similar tendency, although not significant, was observed on the left side (p = 0.06). A significant creep effects for x-axis dispersion values was observed, with higher dispersion values following the deformation protocol on the left side (p≤0.001). Regarding y-axis dispersion values, a significant creep x fatigue interaction effect was observed on the left side (p = 0.016); a similar tendency, although not significant, was observed on the right side (p = 0.08).Combined muscle fatigue and creep deformation of spinal tissues led to changes in muscle activity amplitude, frequency domain and distribution.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4750977?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jacques Abboud
François Nougarou
Martin Descarreaux
spellingShingle Jacques Abboud
François Nougarou
Martin Descarreaux
Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Jacques Abboud
François Nougarou
Martin Descarreaux
author_sort Jacques Abboud
title Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
title_short Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
title_full Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
title_fullStr Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
title_full_unstemmed Muscle Activity Adaptations to Spinal Tissue Creep in the Presence of Muscle Fatigue.
title_sort muscle activity adaptations to spinal tissue creep in the presence of muscle fatigue.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2016-01-01
description The aim of this study was to identify adaptations in muscle activity distribution to spinal tissue creep in presence of muscle fatigue.Twenty-three healthy participants performed a fatigue task before and after 30 minutes of passive spinal tissue deformation in flexion. Right and left erector spinae activity was recorded using large-arrays surface electromyography (EMG). To characterize muscle activity distribution, dispersion was used. During the fatigue task, EMG amplitude root mean square (RMS), median frequency and dispersion in x- and y-axis were compared before and after spinal creep.Important fatigue-related changes in EMG median frequency were observed during muscle fatigue. Median frequency values showed a significant main creep effect, with lower median frequency values on the left side under the creep condition (p≤0.0001). A significant main creep effect on RMS values was also observed as RMS values were higher after creep deformation on the right side (p = 0.014); a similar tendency, although not significant, was observed on the left side (p = 0.06). A significant creep effects for x-axis dispersion values was observed, with higher dispersion values following the deformation protocol on the left side (p≤0.001). Regarding y-axis dispersion values, a significant creep x fatigue interaction effect was observed on the left side (p = 0.016); a similar tendency, although not significant, was observed on the right side (p = 0.08).Combined muscle fatigue and creep deformation of spinal tissues led to changes in muscle activity amplitude, frequency domain and distribution.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4750977?pdf=render
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