Case Study: Effect of Handrim Diameter on Performance in a Paralympic Wheelchair Athlete
Author(s) -
Gabriel B. Costa,
Miguel Polo Rubio,
Salvador Llana Belloch,
Pedro PérezSoriano
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
adapted physical activity quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.618
H-Index - 55
eISSN - 1543-2777
pISSN - 0736-5829
DOI - 10.1123/apaq.26.4.352
Subject(s) - wheelchair , blood lactate , psychology , physical therapy , medicine , heart rate , chemistry , blood pressure , computer science , world wide web
This study, with a top T-52 class athlete, determines the relationship between stroke frequency (SF) and push time (PT) and wheelchair velocity (Wv) using different handrim diameters (HD) and the effect of different HDs on the athlete's heart rate (HR) and blood lactate (LACT) at competition speeds. Wv shows a linear-direct relationship with SF but a linear-inverse relationship with PT (p < .001 in both cases). Using bigger handrims (0.37 m instead of 0.36 m), SF increases 6%, while PT decreases 27% (at 24 Km.h(-1)). HR (p < .0001) increases with Wv and is also affected by HD with differences between the 0.34 m-0.36 m handrim group (lower values) and the 0.37 m handrim (higher values). Significant interaction (p < .0001) is identified between HD and Wv. LACT results seem to follow the same direction as HR. This methodology helped the athlete to choose the optimum HD, and his achievements (some world records) indicate that HD optimization could be highly profitable in sport terms.
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