| Literature DB >> 34978747 |
Thomas G Balshaw1,2, Garry J Massey1,2,3, Thomas M Maden-Wilkinson2,4, Marcel B Lanza2,5, Jonathan P Folland1,2.
Abstract
The purpose of this cross-sectional study was to compare explosive strength and underpinning contractile, hypertrophic, and neuromuscular activation characteristics of long-term maximum strength-trained (LT-MST; ie, ≥3 years of consistent, regular knee extensor training) and untrained individuals. Sixty-three healthy young men (untrained [UNT] n = 49, and LT-MST n = 14) performed isometric maximum and explosive voluntary, as well as evoked octet knee extension contractions. Torque, quadriceps, and hamstring surface EMG were recorded during all tasks. Quadriceps anatomical cross-sectional area (QACSAMAX ; via MRI) was also assessed. Maximum voluntary torque (MVT; +66%) and QACSAMAX (+54%) were greater for LT-MST than UNT ([both] p < 0.001). Absolute explosive voluntary torque (25-150 ms after torque onset; +41 to +64%; [all] p < 0.001; 1.15≤ effect size [ES]≤2.36) and absolute evoked octet torque (50 ms after torque onset; +43, p < 0.001; ES = 3.07) were greater for LT-MST than UNT. However, relative (to MVT) explosive voluntary torque was lower for LT-MST than UNT from 100 to 150 ms after contraction onset (-11% to -16%; 0.001 ≤ p ≤ 0.002; 0.98 ≤ ES ≤ 1.11). Relative evoked octet torque 50 ms after onset was lower (-10%; p < 0.001; ES = 1.14) and octet time to peak torque longer (+8%; p = 0.001; ES = 1.18) for LT-MST than UNT indicating slower contractile properties, independent from any differences in torque amplitude. The greater absolute explosive strength of the LT-MST group was attributable to higher evoked explosive strength, that in turn appeared to be due to larger quadriceps muscle size, rather than any differences in neuromuscular activation. In contrast, the inferior relative explosive strength of LT-MST appeared to be underpinned by slower intrinsic/evoked contractile properties.Entities:
Keywords: agonist muscle; antagonist muscle; rate of torque development; strength training; surface electromyography
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Year: 2022 PMID: 34978747 PMCID: PMC9305549 DOI: 10.1111/sms.14120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scand J Med Sci Sports ISSN: 0905-7188 Impact factor: 4.645
FIGURE 1Torque in absolute (A) and relative (to maximum voluntary torque [MVT]; B) terms during voluntary explosive isometric knee extension contractions for long‐term maximum strength‐trained (LT‐MST, n = 14) and untrained (UNT, n = 49) groups. MVT recorded during maximum voluntary contractions is also shown in (A) for reference. Symbols denote differences between the two groups (independent sample t‐tests) as follows: †p = 0.056 (tendency), **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. Percentage difference between group mean values (LT‐MST relative to UNT) are shown
FIGURE 2Rate of torque development (RFD) in absolute (A) and relative (to maximum voluntary torque [MVT]; B) terms for consecutive 50‐ms time windows during voluntary explosive isometric knee extension contractions for long‐term maximum strength‐trained (LT‐MST, n = 14) and untrained (UNT, n = 49) groups. Symbols denote differences between the two groups (independent sample t‐tests) as follows: ***p < 0.001. Percentage difference between group mean values (LT‐MST relative to UNT) are shown
FIGURE 3(A) Absolute agonist (Q) electromyography (EMG), (B) Normalized agonist EMG, and (C) Normalized antagonist (H) EMG during maximum voluntary torque production (MVT) and explosive contraction (0–50, 50–100, and 100–150 ms after EMG onset) of the knee extensors for long‐term maximum strength‐trained (LT‐MST, n = 14) and untrained (UNT, n = 49) groups. For absolute QEMG, root‐mean‐square amplitude was corrected for muscle‐electrode distance (ie, adiposity). Knee flexion EMGMAX, agonist EMG during knee flexion MVT. Symbols denote differences between the two groups (independent sample t‐tests) as follows: ‡p = 0.096 (tendency), *p < 0.05, ***p < 0.001. Percentage difference values denote difference in the LT‐MST group mean relative to UNT group mean
FIGURE 4Absolute torque 50 ms after torque onset and at peak torque during evoked octet (A) and twitch (B) contractions, as well as relative torque after 50 ms (to peak torque, C) and time to peak torque (D) during these contractions for long‐term maximum strength‐trained (LT‐MST, n = 12) and untrained (UNT, n = 49) groups. Symbols denote differences between the two groups (independent sample t‐tests) as follows: *p < 0.05, **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001. Percentage difference values denote difference in the LT‐MST group mean relative to UNT group mean