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- Title
Physiological and Biomechanical Responses to Prolonged Heavy Load Carriage During Level Treadmill Walking in Females.
- Authors
Lidstone, Daniel E.; Stewart, Justin A.; Gurchiek, Reed; Needle, Alan R.; van Werkhoven, Herman; McBride, Jeffrey M.
- Abstract
Heavy load carriage has been identified as a main contributing factor to the high incidence of overuse injuries in soldiers. Peak vertical ground reaction force (VGRFMAX) and maximal vertical loading rates (VLRMAX) may increase during heavy prolonged load carriage with the development of muscular fatigue and reduced shock attenuation capabilities. The objectives of the current study were (1) to examine physiological and biomechanical changes that occur during a prolonged heavy load carriage task, and (2) to examine if this task induces neuromuscular fatigue and changes in muscle architecture. Eight inexperienced female participants walked on an instrumented treadmill carrying operational loads for 60 minutes at 5.4 km⋅h-1. Oxygen consumption (...O2), heart rate, rating of perceived exertion (RPE), trunk lean angle, and ground reaction forces were recorded continuously during task. Maximal force and in-vivo muscle architecture were assessed pre- and posttask. Significant increases were observed for VGRFMAX, VLRMAX, trunk lean angle, ...O2, heart rate, and RPE during the task. Increased vastus lateralis fascicle length and decreased maximal force production were also observed posttask. Prolonged heavy load carriage, in an inexperienced population carrying operational loads, results in progressive increases in ground reaction force parameters that have been associated with overuse injury.
- Subjects
BIOMECHANICS; BIOPHYSICS; CARDIOPULMONARY system; EXERCISE tests; GROUND reaction forces (Biomechanics); OVERUSE injuries; SCIENTIFIC method; OXYGEN consumption; WEIGHT-bearing (Orthopedics); MUSCLE fatigue
- Publication
Journal of Applied Biomechanics, 2017, Vol 33, Issue 4, p248
- ISSN
1065-8483
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1123/jab.2016-0185