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Comparative Study
. 2006 May;86(5):683-97.

Neuromuscular activation in conventional therapeutic exercises and heavy resistance exercises: implications for rehabilitation

Affiliations
  • PMID: 16649892
Comparative Study

Neuromuscular activation in conventional therapeutic exercises and heavy resistance exercises: implications for rehabilitation

Lars L Andersen et al. Phys Ther. 2006 May.

Abstract

Background and purpose: Central activation failure and muscular atrophy are common after knee joint injury. Thus, exercises that aim to stimulate muscular hypertrophy and increase neural drive to the muscle fibers should be used during rehabilitation. This study examined the level of knee joint neuromuscular activation during 4 conventional therapeutic exercises (quadriceps femoris muscle setting, manual lateralization of the patella, rhythmic stabilization, and the pelvic bridging exercise) and 4 heavy resistance exercises (free-weight squat with a barbell, horizontal seated leg press, isolated knee extension with a cam mechanism, and isolated hamstring muscle curl) in young, untrained men who were healthy.

Subjects: Thirteen male subjects (mean age=25.3 years, SD=3.0) with no previous history of knee injury participated in the study.

Methods: Neuromuscular activation during the exercises was defined as the root-mean-square (RMS) electromyographic (EMG) signal normalized to the peak RMS EMG signal of a maximal isometric muscle contraction.

Results: Low levels of neuromuscular activation were found during all conventional exercises (<35%). A limitation may be that only a few of many different conventional exercises were investigated. The highest level of neuromuscular activation (67%-79%) was observed during the open kinetic chain resistance exercises (isolated knee extension and hamstring muscle curl). None of the conventional exercises or heavy resistance exercises were found to preferentially activate the vastus medialis muscle over the vastus lateralis muscle.

Discussion and conclusion: The results indicate that heavy resistance exercises should be included in rehabilitation programs to induce sufficient levels of neuromuscular activation to stimulate muscle growth and strength.

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