Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of neuromuscular fatigue and gender on peroneus brevis muscle (PB) and peroneus longus muscle (PL) reflexes elicited by sudden ankle inversion. Sixteen males and fifteen females stood on a “trap-door” platform that suddenly inverted the ankle 20° when released. The resulting movement elicited peroneal reflexes. Reflex measurements were collected both before and after fatiguing the ankle evertors. Reflex delay in the PB and PL was not affected by fatigue, gender, or their interaction. Reflex amplitude in the PL exhibited no main effect of fatigue or gender, but their interaction was significant. Pairwise comparisons revealed PL reflex amplitude decreased by 11.3% in males ( p = 0.008) and increased 22.1% in females ( p = 0.003) with fatigue. A similar trend was found in the PB, but was not statistically significant. This opposite effect in females and males may be due to differences in how males and females compensate for fatigue, and may be related to the gender difference in ankle injury rate.

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