| Literature DB >> 33998382 |
Jamie E Hibbert1, Anthony S Kulas1, Patrick M Rider1, Zachary J Domire1.
Abstract
A practice session is common prior to strength testing. However, the benefits of practice have not been previously reported. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of a practice session on peak torque, mean torque and between trial variability across three test days. We hypothesized that peak and mean torque would be higher and less variable the second and third test days than the first. Twenty-five healthy, young participants completed 3 maximal voluntary isometric and isokinetic knee extensions on three separate days. No difference in isometric torque was found between days 1 and 2, but there was a significant decrease in isokinetic torque (8.45 Nm). There was a significant decrease in both mean isometric and isokinetic torque from day 1 to day 3 (12.67 and 13.59 Nm). Contrary to our hypothesis, no benefit from a practice session was found. Healthy, young adults are able to produce peak knee extensor torques on the first day of testing and do not demonstrate any benefit from additional testing. Thus, a practice day preceding isometric and isokinetic knee extensor strength testing may not be necessary when testing healthy, young participants, and may, in fact, negatively impact subsequent strength measurements.Entities:
Keywords: Dynamometry; reliability; strength testing; young adults
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33998382 PMCID: PMC8130721 DOI: 10.1080/23335432.2020.1766997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Biomech ISSN: 2333-5432
Figure 1.Experimental setup for isometric knee extensor strength testing
Average values for peak isometric torque, mean isometric torque and standard deviation showing variability of peak isometric torque between trials on each of the three test days. All values are shown as the mean of that variable ± SD. * p <.05 comparing day 1 to day 3. All other day-to-day comparisons were non-significant
| Peak Torque (N m) | Mean Torque (N m) | Standard Deviation | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 216.32 ± 55.76 | 207.59 ± 53.82* | 8.79 ± 4.41 |
| Day 2 | 212.40 ± 66.81 | 203.04 ± 63.16 | 9.63 ± 6.06 |
| Day 3 | 206.56 ± 60.28 | 194.92 ± 57.76 | 11.47 ± 5.01 |
Figure 2.(a) Comparison of the difference in isometric mean values from day 1 to day 2 (b) Comparison of the difference in isometric mean values from day 1 to day 3. Each data point represents the difference in mean isometric torque production values for each individual participant. The red line represents the overall mean difference between the two days. The dotted lines represent the upper and lower limits of agreement
Average values for peak isokinetic torque, mean isokinetic torque and standard deviation showing the variability of peak isokinetic torque between trials on each of the three test days. All values are shown as the mean of that variable ± SD. * p <.05 comparing day 1 to day 2 and day 1 to day 3. All other day-to-day comparisons were non-significant
| Peak Torque (N m) | Mean Torque (N m) | Standard Deviation (N m) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 1 | 187.87 ± 51.36* | 178.19 ± 50.93* | 9.70 ± 12.05 |
| Day 2 | 178.17 ± 47.53 | 170.54 ± 46.26 | 7.64 ± 4.82 |
| Day 3 | 173.68 ± 44.59 | 164.60 ± 44.17 | 9.77 ± 6.21 |
Figure 3.(a) Comparison of the difference in isokinetic mean values from day 1 to day 2 (b) Comparison of the difference in mean isokinetic values from day 1 to day 3. Each data point represents the difference in mean isokinetic torque production values for each individual participant. The red line represents the overall mean difference between the two days. The dotted lines represent the upper and lower limits of agreement