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Eccentric exercise and delayed onset muscle soreness reduce the variability of active cervical movements

Authors :
Nicola R Heneghan
Corrado Cescon
Alison Rushton
Deborah Falla
F. Alsultan
Marco Barbero
Source :
Journal of Biomechanics. 111:109962
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

People with acute neck pain commonly present with restricted neck movement. However, it is unknown whether the presence of acute pain affects the quality of neck movement; specifically neck movement variability. We examined the effects of acute neck muscle soreness induced via eccentric exercise in healthy volunteers, on the variability of neck movement by examining changes in parameters of the helical axis during active neck movements. An experimental, single-arm repeated measures study recruited 32 healthy participants, male and female, aged between 18 to 55. Repetitive active neck movements (flexion-extension, bilateral lateral flexion and bilateral rotation) were performed at different speeds, either at full range of motion (RoM) or restricted to 45° RoM at baseline pre-exercise (T0), immediately following eccentric neck exercise (T1), 24 hours (T2) and 48 hours post-exercise (T3). The mean distance (MD) and mean angle (MA) parameters of the helical axis were extracted to quantify movement variability. MD, measured during movements performed at full RoM, reduced significantly at T2 compared to T0 (P = 0.001) regardless of direction or speed of movement. MA was significantly lower at T2 and T3 compared to T1 (P = 0.029 and P = 0.033, respectively). When RoM was restricted to 45°, significantly lower MD values were observed at T3 compared to T1 (P = 0.034), and significantly lower MA values were measured at T3 compared to T0, T1 and T2 (all P This study uniquely demonstrates that neck movement variability is reduced immediately after, 24 hours and 48 hours after eccentric exercise, indicating that acute neck muscle soreness modifies the quality of neck movement.

Details

ISSN :
00219290
Volume :
111
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Biomechanics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....47c46bb42e0335e3d208c5679a2cca3b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jbiomech.2020.109962