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DOI: 10.1055/s-0029-1234082
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Whole Body Vibration Does not Enhance Muscle Activation
Publication History
accepted after revision July 02, 2009
Publication Date:
02 November 2009 (online)
Abstract
Whether a whole body vibration session can enhance muscle voluntary activation remains debated. This pilot study thus investigated the acute effects of an intervention with whole body vibration versus a “sham” intervention on the voluntary activation of knee extensor muscles. Ten healthy subjects volunteered to participate in two interventions, vibration and sham, in randomized order. Knee extensor muscle voluntary activation, contractile properties and maximal voluntary isometric contraction were assessed before and immediately after each intervention. No significant differences were found for any of the variables. After both interventions, muscle activation remained unchanged, whereas maximal voluntary isometric contraction was significantly reduced (p<0.05). In conclusion, the two interventions induced the same adaptations in the knee extensors. These findings can be useful in conceiving whole body vibration protocols, although future research is warranted to address the influence of vibration on neural adaptation.
Key words
twitch interpolation technique - maximal voluntary contraction - evoked contractions - knee extensors
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Correspondence
Dr. S. S. Colson
University of Nice-Sophia Antipolis
Laboratory of Human Motricity
Education and Health
Faculty of Sport Sciences
06205 Nice
France
Phone: +33/492/296 535
Fax: +33/492/296 549
Email: colson@unice.fr