Selective effect of static stretching, concentric contractions, and a balance task on ankle force sense
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Mostrar el registro completo del ítemEditorial
PLOS
Fecha
2019-01-17Referencia bibliográfica
D, García-Ramos A, Tomazin K, Strojnik V (2019) Selective effect of static stretching, concentric contractions, and a balance task on ankle force sense. PLoS ONE 14(1): e0210881.
Patrocinador
This work was supported by Javna Agencija za Raziskovalno Dejavnost RS (SI) (P5- 0142 to DS).Resumen
Proper ankle motor control is critical for balance in the human body during functional activities
such as standing, walking, and running. Different exercise modalities are often performed
during the same training session where earlier activities may influence later ones.
The purpose of the current study was to determine the acute effects of different exercise
modalities on ankle force sense. Seventeen subjects performed four different intervention
protocols (static stretching, balance task, concentric contractions, and control) in random
order. Each session comprised measurements before and after the intervention protocol of
the force sense of the ankle plantar flexors (PF) and dorsal flexors (DF) at 10% and 30%
of maximal voluntary isometric contraction (MVC). Absolute errors (AE) were calculated
separately for each force level and muscle group. An overall PF error (PF-SUM = PF at 10%
MVC + PF at 30%MVC), DF error (DF-SUM = DF at 10%MVC + DF at 30%MVC) and ankle
error (PF-DF-SUM = PF-SUM + DF-SUM) were also calculated. The main effect of time
generally revealed that ankle force sense was significantly reduced after static stretching
(PF-DF-SUM: Pre: 6.11±2.17 Nm, Post: 8.03±3.28 Nm; p < 0.05), but no significant differences
were observed for the concentric contractions (PF-DF-SUM: Pre: 6.01±1.97 Nm,
Post: 6.50±2.28 Nm) and the balance task (PF-DF-SUM: Pre: 5.25±1.97 Nm, Post: 5.50
±1.26 Nm). The only significant interaction was observed for the PF-DF-SUM (F = 4.48, p =
0.008) due to greater error scores after stretching (+31.4%) compared to the concentric
(+8.2%), balance (+4.8%), and control (-3.5%) conditions. Based on these results, static
stretching should not be performed before activities that require a high ankle force sense
such as balance, coordination, and precision tasks.