Premium
Provocative mechanical tests of the peripheral nervous system affect the joint torque‐angle during passive knee motion
Author(s) -
Andrade R. J.,
Freitas S. R.,
Vaz J. R.,
Bruno P. M.,
PezaratCorreia P.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of medicine and science in sports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.575
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1600-0838
pISSN - 0905-7188
DOI - 10.1111/sms.12250
Subject(s) - ankle , medicine , trunk , electromyography , supine position , knee joint , physical medicine and rehabilitation , anatomy , knee flexion , torque , biomechanics , jumping , orthodontics , surgery , physics , ecology , biology , thermodynamics , physiology
This study aimed to determine the influence of the head, upper trunk, and foot position on the passive knee extension ( PKE ) torque‐angle response. PKE tests were performed in 10 healthy subjects using an isokinetic dynamometer at 2°/s. Subjects lay in the supine position with their hips flexed to 90°. The knee angle, passive torque, surface electromyography ( EMG ) of the semitendinosus and quadriceps vastus medialis, and stretch discomfort were recorded in six body positions during PKE . The different maximal active positions of the cervical spine (neutral; flexion; extension), thoracic spine (neutral; flexion), and ankle (neutral; dorsiflexion) were passively combined for the tests. Visual analog scale scores and EMG were unaffected by body segment positioning. An effect of the ankle joint was verified on the peak torque and knee maximum angle when the ankle was in the dorsiflexion position ( P < 0.05). Upper trunk positioning had an effect on the knee submaximal torque ( P < 0.05), observed as an increase in the knee passive submaximal torque when the cervical and thoracic spines were flexed ( P < 0.05). In conclusion, other apparently mechanical unrelated body segments influence torque‐angle response since different positions of head, upper trunk, and foot induce dissimilar knee mechanical responses during passive extension.