We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Effects of Age, Gender and Level of Co-contraction on Elbow and Shoulder Rotational Stiffness and Damping in the Impulsively End-Loaded Upper Extremity.
- Authors
Lee, Yunju; Ashton-Miller, James
- Abstract
Whether an arm will buckle under an impulsive end-load should partly depend on the elastic and viscous properties of the pretensed arm muscles. In measuring these properties we hypothesized that neither age, gender, nor muscle pre-contraction level would affect the bilinear elbow or shoulder lumped rotational stiffness or damping parameters in the impulsively end-loaded upper extremity of 38 healthy men and women. Subjects were instructed to preactivate triceps to either 25, 50 or 75% of maximum myoelectric activity levels. Then a standardized impulsive end-load was applied via a 6-axis load cell to the wrist of the slightly flexed arm in the prone posture. Arm kinematic responses were acquired at 280 Hz and an inverse dynamics analysis was used to estimate the bilinear rotational stiffnesses and damping parameters at the elbow and shoulder. The results show that pre-contraction level affected normalized joint rotational stiffness and damping coefficients ( p < 0.02). Age affected the initial stiffness for the elbow ( p < 0.05), and gender affected that of the shoulder in the sagittal plane ( p < 0.006). Arm muscle strength was positively related to normalized stiffness at the elbow, but not the shoulder. We conclude that age, gender and pre-contraction level each affect the viscoelastic behavior of the end-loaded upper extremity in healthy adults.
- Subjects
ARM; JOINT stiffness; ELECTROMYOGRAPHY; ELECTROPHYSIOLOGY; ELECTRODIAGNOSIS
- Publication
Annals of Biomedical Engineering, 2015, Vol 43, Issue 5, p1112
- ISSN
0090-6964
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s10439-014-1185-3