Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4350410 Neuroscience Letters 2006 5 Pages PDF
Abstract
To investigate the capacity of the central nervous system to integrate and differentiate two different muscular fatigue states, the present study examines the changes on multi-joint movement organization following muscular fatigue of elbow extensor muscles (triceps brachii) induced by voluntary versus electrically induced contractions. Twenty right-handed male volunteers performed throws in the horizontal plane before and after two fatiguing procedures. First, success rate of throws was not affected by fatigue neither after voluntary contractions, nor after electrically induced contractions. Despite similar reductions of the maximal voluntary isometric force and the median frequency of the electromyographic signal following both fatiguing protocols, voluntary contractions induced greater changes in muscle activation, kinematics and kinetics during throws than electrically induced contractions. The changes observed following voluntary contractions are interpreted as a compensatory strategy involving a greater contribution of the wrist. In contrast, the greater activation of the triceps brachii could compensate the weakness of this muscle induced by fatigue without any modification of the initial multi-joint movement organization.
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