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The effect of muscle fatigue on the last stride before stepping down a curb
Authors
Begg
Buckley
+26 more
Cappozzo
Crosbie
Dieën
Fabio Augusto Barbieri
Hak
Helbostad
Helbostad
Hermens
Hof
Ivers
Jaap H. Van Dieën
Kellis
Kingma
Konczak
Lilian Teresa Bucken Gobbi
Lord
Lythgo
Mirjam Pijnappels
Murdock
Padua
Parijat
Patla
Pijnappels
Tinetti
Vila-Chã
Yun-Ju Lee
Publication date
1 January 2013
Publisher
Doi
Abstract
The stride before landing may be important during stepping down. The aim of this study was to analyze variability of the kinematics and muscle activity in the final stride before stepping down a curb, with and without ankle and knee muscle fatigue. Ten young participants walked at self-selected speed and stepped down a height difference (10-cm) in ongoing gait. Five trials were performed before and after a muscle fatigue protocol (one day: ankle muscle fatigue, another day: knee muscle fatigue). The analysis focused on the trailing leg during the last but one and the last step on the higher level. Kinematics and muscle activity were recorded. Fatigue increased variability of foot-step horizontal distance in the last step on the higher level of the trailing limb, as well as in the first steps on the lower level for both limbs. This appeared due to an increase in the range of motion of the knee joint after both fatigue protocols. Participants additionally showed an increased ankle and hip ROM and decreased knee ROM. Our results suggest a loss of control under fatigue reflected in a higher variability of trailing and leading limb-step horizontal distances, with compensatory changes to limit fatigue effects, such as a redistribution of movement over joints. © 2012 Elsevier B.V
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