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Within- and between-day reliability and repeatability of neuromuscular function assessment in females and males.

Authors :
Medeiros Dutra, Yago
Fialho Lopes, João Pedro
Murias, Juan M.
Moura Zagatto, Alessandro
Source :
Journal of Applied Physiology; Dec2023, Vol. 135 Issue 6, p1372-1383, 12p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The study evaluated the reliability and repeatability of the force and surface electromyography activity (EMG) outcomes obtained through voluntary and electrically evoked contractions of knee extensors in females (n = 18) and males (n = 20) and compared these data between sexes. Maximal isometric voluntary contractions (iMVCs) of knee extensors associated with electrical stimulation of the femoral nerve were performed over 4 days (48-h interval), with the first day involving familiarization procedures, the second involving three trials (1-h interval), and the third and fourth involving just one trial. The intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), coefficient of variation (CV), and repeatability of outcomes from within- and betweenday trials were determined for each sex. Females presented lower maximal voluntary force during iMVC (iMVCForce) and associated vastus lateralis EMG activity (root mean square, RMSVL), force evoked by potentiated doublet high-frequency (Db100Force) and single stimuli (Qtw), and M-wave amplitude than males (P - 0.01, partial eta squared -0.94). Voluntary activation (VA) and RMSVL/M-wave amplitude did not differ between sexes. iMVCForce, VA, Db100Force, Qtw, and M-wave amplitude were the most reliable outcomes in within-day trials, with similar results between sexes (ICC > 0.62; CV < 6.4%; repeatability: 12.2%-22.6%). When investigating between-day trials, the iMVCForce, VA, Db100Force, and Qtw were the most reliable (ICC > 0.66; CV < 7.5%; repeatability: 13.2%-33.45%) with similar results between sexes. In conclusion, females presented lower iMVCForce and evoked response than males. Although reliability and repeatability statistics vary between trials, data (e.g., from EMG or force signal), and sexes, most of the outcomes obtained through this technique are reliable in females and males. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
87507587
Volume :
135
Issue :
6
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Journal of Applied Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174360846
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/japplphysiol.00539.2023