Abstract

Reduced paraspinal muscle size and flattening of spinal curvatures have been documented after spaceflight. Assessment of trunk adaptations to hypogravity can contribute to development of specific countermeasures. In this study, parabolic flights were used to investigate spinal curvature and muscle responses to hypogravity. Data from five trials at 0.25 g, 0.50 g, and 0.75 g were recorded from six participants positioned in a kneeling-seated position. During the first two trials, participants maintained a normal, upright posture. In the last three trials, small-amplitude perturbations were delivered in the anterior direction at the T10 level. Spinal curvature was estimated with motion capture cameras. Trunk displacement and contact force between the actuator and participant were recorded. Muscle activity responses were collected by intramuscular electromyography (iEMG) of the deep and superficial lumbar multifidus, iliocostalis lumborum, longissimus thoracis, quadratus lumborum, transversus abdominis, obliquus internus, and obliquus externus muscles. The root mean square iEMG and the average spinal angles were calculated. Trunk admittance and muscle responses to perturbations were calculated as closed-loop frequency-response functions. Compared with 0.75 g, 0.25 g resulted in lower activation of the longissimus thoracis (P = 0.002); lower responses of the superficial multifidus at low frequencies (P = 0.043); lower responses of the superficial multifidus (P = 0.029) and iliocostalis lumborum (P = 0.043); lower trunk admittance (P = 0.037) at intermediate frequencies; and stronger responses of the transversus abdominis at higher frequencies (P = 0.032). These findings indicate that exposure to hypogravity reduces trunk admittance, partially compensated by weaker stabilizing contributions of the paraspinal muscles and coinciding with an apparent increase of deep abdominal muscle activity.NEW & NOTEWORTHY This study presents for the first time novel insights into the adaptations to hypogravity of spinal curvatures, trunk stiffness, and paraspinal muscle activity. We showed that exposure to hypogravity reduces the displacement of the trunk by an applied perturbation, partially compensated by weaker stabilizing contributions of the paraspinal muscles and concomitant increase in abdominal muscle responses. These findings may have relevance for future recommendations for planetary surface explorations.

Highlights

  • The spine is affected by exposure to microgravity [42]

  • A significant effect of gravity level was found for the longissimus thoracis pars thoracis (LO) muscle root mean square (RMS) EMG (F2,10 ϭ 11.43; P ϭ 0.003)

  • In comparison to the highest hypogravity condition (0.75 g), low hypogravity (0.25 g) induced 1) lower myoelectric activity of the LO muscle at rest; 2) lower trunk admittance and lumbar muscle response during perturbation; and 3) greater transversus abdominis (TrA) muscle responses during perturbation. These findings suggest that exposure to hypogravity reduces the neuromuscular contribution of trunk extensor muscles to control spinal posture at rest (LO) and during perturbation (IL and superficial MF), with a concomitant increase in deep abdominal muscle (TrA) responses to perturbations

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The spine is affected by exposure to microgravity [42]. During a space mission, the spinal column lengthens more than two times the average daily values [7, 48]. To date only morphological evidence of muscle atrophy after long-term space missions is available [8, 27], and no studies have investigated the acute effect of transient reduction of gravity on lumbar muscle function. Investigation of the effects of transient exposure to different gravitational levels on the neuromuscular activity of trunk http://www.jap.org muscles will allow the identification of which muscles are most sensitive to the gravitation transitions involved in spaceflights. This knowledge is a first step toward understanding the impacts of exposure to this environment and for the development of tailored countermeasures to prevent back pain and spinal injury in astronauts

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.