| Literature DB >> 35076554 |
Christopher B Taber1, Roy J Colter1, Jair J Davis1, Patrick A Seweje1, Dustin P Wilson1, Jonathan Z Foster1, Justin J Merrigan2.
Abstract
There has been limited research to explore the use of body tempering and when the use of this modality would be most appropriate. This study aimed to determine if a body tempering intervention would be appropriate pre-exercise by examining its effects on perceived soreness, range of motion (ROM), and force production compared to an intervention of traditional stretching. The subjects for this study were ten Division 1 (D1) football linemen from Sacred Heart University (Age: 19.9 ± 1.5 years, body mass: 130.9 ± 12.0 kg, height: 188.4 ± 5.1 cm, training age: 8.0 ± 3.5 years). Subjects participated in three sessions with the first session being baseline testing. The second and third sessions involved the participants being randomized to receive either the body tempering or stretching intervention for the second session and then receiving the other intervention the final week. Soreness using a visual analog scale (VAS), ROM, counter movement jump (CMJ) peak force and jump height, static jump (SJ) peak force and jump height, and isometric mid-thigh pull max force production were assessed. The results of the study concluded that body tempering does not have a negative effect on muscle performance but did practically reduce perceived muscle soreness. Since body tempering is effective at reducing soreness in athletes, it can be recommended for athletes as part of their pre-exercise warmup without negatively effecting isometric or dynamic force production.Entities:
Keywords: isometric strength; myofascial release; stretching; tempering; vertical jumps
Year: 2022 PMID: 35076554 PMCID: PMC8788561 DOI: 10.3390/jfmk7010009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Funct Morphol Kinesiol ISSN: 2411-5142
Main time and interaction effects (F statistic, p-value).
| Variable | Protocol Effect | Protocol × Time Interaction |
|---|---|---|
| Straight Leg Raise (°) | (0.003, 0.958) | (0.283, 0.598) |
| Thomas Test (°) | (0.018, 0.895) | (0.309, 0.582) |
| 90–90 Extension (°) | (0.015, 0.903) | (1.452, 0.236) |
| Eli Test (°) | (0.064, 0.801) | (0.064, 0.801) |
| Soreness (mm) | (1.379, 0.248) | (1.230, 0.278) |
| SJ JH(cm) | (0.010, 0.921) | (0.047, 0.829) |
| SJ PP (W) | (0.003, 0.953) | (0.003, 0.953) |
| CMJ JH(cm) | (0.012, 0.913) | (0.004, 0.951) |
| CMJ PP (W) | (0.010, 0.921) | (0.047, 0.829) |
| Peak Force (N) | (0.211, 0.649) | (0.211, 0.649) |
Note: SJ JH, squat jump height; SJ PP, squat jump peak power; CMJ JH, countermovement jump height; CMJ PP, countermovement jump peak power; peak force, isometric mid-thigh pull peak force.
Group averages presented as mean (M) ± standard deviation.
| Variable | Group | Pre | Post | %Change | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Straight Leg Raise (°) | Tempering | 62.4 ± 3.37 | 66.6 ± 5.89 | 6.73 | 0.84, large |
| Thomas Test (°) | Tempering | 86.5 ± 12.01 | 87.40 ± 10.56 | 1.04 | 0.12, negligible |
| 90–90 Extension (°) | Tempering | 150.9 ± 4.93 | 150.6 ± 5.44 | 0.20 | −0.04, negligible |
| Eli Test (°) | Tempering | 114.7 ± 11.09 | 116.1 ± 9.92 | 1.22 | 0.27, small |
| Soreness (mm) | Tempering | 43.0 ± 26.66 | 23.90 ± 14.16 | 42.06 | −0.94, large |
| SJ JH(cm) | Tempering | 32.29 ± 6.48 | 32.29 ± 6.19 | 0.02 | −0.07, negligible |
| SJ PP (W) | Tempering | 6301.6 ± 729.4 | 6242.3 ± 579.7 | 0.64 | −0.19, negligible |
| CMJ JH(cm) | Tempering | 37.22 ± 7.86 | 36.25 ± 7.78 | 2.59 | −0.76, moderate |
| CMJ PP (W) | Tempering | 6471.4 ± 691.5 | 6423.6 ± 552.91 | 0.48 | −0.20, small |
| Peak Force (N) | Tempering | 4202 ± 534 | 4113 ± 373 | 1.34 | −0.23, small |
Note: SJ JH, squat jump height; SJ PP, squat jump peak power; CMJ JH, countermovement jump height; CMJ PP, countermovement jump peak power; peak force, isometric mid-thigh pull peak force.
Figure 1Group and individual responses for select testing metrics for stretching and body tempering.