Abstract

Neuromuscular assessment of rock climbers has been mainly focused on forearm muscles in the literature. We aimed to extend the body of knowledge investigating on two other upper limb muscles during sport-specific activities in nine male rock climbers. We assessed neuromuscular manifestations of fatigue recording surface electromyographic signals from brachioradialis and teres major muscles, using multi-channel electrode arrays. Participants performed two tasks until volitional exhaustion: a sequence of dynamic pull-ups and an isometric contraction sustaining the body at half-way of a pull-up (with the elbows flexed at 90°). The tasks were performed in randomized order with 10 minutes of rest in between. The normalized rate of change of muscle fiber conduction velocity was calculated as the index of fatigue. The time-to-task failure was significantly shorter in the dynamic (31 ±10 s) than isometric contraction (59 ±19 s). The rate of decrease of muscle fiber conduction velocity was found steeper in the dynamic than isometric task both in brachioradialis (isometric: −0.2 ±0.1%/s; dynamic: −1.2 ±0.6%/s) and teres major muscles (isometric: −0.4±0.3%/s; dynamic: −1.8±0.7%/s). The main finding was that a sequence of dynamic pull-ups lead to higher fatigue than sustaining the body weight in an isometric condition at half-way of a pull-up. Furthermore, we confirmed the possibility to properly record physiological CV estimates from two muscles, which had never been studied before in rock climbing, in highly dynamic contractions.

Highlights

  • In recent years research on rock climbing has increased

  • In the study an isometric contraction in the hanged position (ISO) and a http://www.johk.pl sequence of dynamic pull-ups (END) until volitional exhaustion were compared in rock climbers

  • We focused on the EMG activity of two muscles which had never been studied before in rock climbing: brachioradialis and teres major muscles

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Summary

Introduction

Neuromuscular investigation conducted on rock climbers has been mainly focused on forearm muscles and handgrip/finger strength and fatigability (Esposito et al, 2009; MacLeod et al, 2007; Quaine and Vigouroux, 2004; Quaine et al, 2003). Surface electromyography (sEMG) has been used to extract useful information upon neuromuscular strategies adopted in climbing. Beyond “global signal” information such as the amplitude and the mean frequency of the power spectrum, multichannel sEMG techniques offer the possibility to estimate muscle fiber conduction velocity (CV) within the detection muscle volume. CV is an important physiological variable defined as the propagation’s speed of the motor unit action potential along the sarcolemma (Merletti et al, 1990) and it is related to the size of the recruited muscle fibers (Blijham et al, 2006; Farina et al, 2004). Regarding highly dynamic conditions, such as those occurring in rock climbing, the non-stationarity structure of sEMG signals should be taken into account by estimating

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