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Central fatigue mechanisms are responsible for decreases in hand proprioceptive acuity following shoulder muscle fatigue.

Authors :
Sadler, Christin M.
Cressman, Erin K.
Source :
Human Movement Science. Aug2019, Vol. 66, p220-230. 11p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

• Hand proprioceptive acuity assessed passively following shoulder muscle fatigue. • Proprioceptive acuity of both hands decreased after the right shoulder was fatigued. • Variability of proprioceptive estimates was not affected by shoulder muscle fatigue. • Central fatigue mechanisms drive proprioceptive changes in the distal limb. Muscle fatigue is a complex phenomenon, consisting of central and peripheral mechanisms which contribute to local and systemic changes in motor performance. In particular, it has been demonstrated that afferent processing in the fatigued muscle (e.g., shoulder), as well as in surrounding or distal muscles (e.g., hand) can be altered by fatigue. Currently, it is unclear how proximal muscle fatigue affects proprioceptive acuity of the distal limb. The purpose of the present study was to assess the effects of shoulder muscle fatigue on participants' ability to judge the location of their hand using only proprioceptive cues. Participants' (N = 16) limbs were moved outwards by a robot manipulandum and they were instructed to estimate the position of their hand relative to one of four visual reference targets (two near, two far). This estimation task was completed before and after a repetitive pointing task was performed to fatigue the shoulder muscles. To assess central versus peripheral effects of fatigue on the distal limb, the right shoulder was fatigued and proprioceptive acuity of the left and right hands were tested. Results showed that there was a significant decrease in the accuracy of proprioceptive estimates for both hands after the right shoulder was fatigued, with no change in the precision of proprioceptive estimates. A control experiment (N = 8), in which participants completed the proprioceptive estimation task before and after a period of quiet sitting, ruled out the possibility that the bilateral changes in proprioceptive accuracy were due to a practice effect. Together, these results indicate that shoulder muscle fatigue decreases proprioceptive acuity in both hands, suggesting that central fatigue mechanisms are primarily responsible for changes in afferent feedback processing of the distal upper limb. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01679457
Volume :
66
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Movement Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141605632
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.humov.2019.04.016