Abstract
Background: The use of rehabilitation protocols carried out in water has been progressively increasing due to the favorable physical properties of the water. Electromyography allows one to register muscle activity even under water. Aim: To compare muscle activity between two groups (healthy young adults (HYA) and healthy older adults (HOA)) in two different environments (dry land and aquatic) using surface electromyography during the execution of four different test/functional movements. Methods: Analytical cross-sectional study. HYA and HOA carried out four functional tasks (Step Up and Down, Sit TO Stand test, Gait Initiation and Turns During Gait) in two different environments (dry land and aquatic). Absolute and relative muscle activation was compared between each group and between each environment. In addition, the stability of the measured was calculated through a test-retest (ICC 2:1). Results: Within the same environment there were significant differences between young and older adults in three of the four functional tasks. In contrast, in the gait initiation, hardly any significant differences were found between the two groups analysed, except for the soleus and the anterior tibial. Measurement stability ranged from good to excellent. Conclusions: Level of the musculature involvement presents an entirely different distribution when the test/functional task is performed on dry land or in water. There are differences both in the relative activation of the musculature and in the distribution of the partition of the muscles comparing older and young adults within the same environment.
Highlights
In recent years, the use of rehabilitation protocols carried out in water has been progressively increasing
The distribution in the relative participation changes substantially when the execution of the test/functional movement is carried out in or out of the water. It is mainly the muscles of the lower limbs that make the greatest contribution to the gesture, while in the water it is the muscles of the trunk that take on the most significant role
The present study aimed to observe the differences in the activation and involvement of certain muscles of the thigh, leg and back (MG, biceps femoris (BF), VMVI, RAC, BF, the anterior (TA), medial gastrocnemius (MG), SO, RAA and EE) during the execution of four test/functional movement on dry land and in water comparing the execution between healthy young adults (HYA) and healthy older adults (HOA)
Summary
The use of rehabilitation protocols carried out in water has been progressively increasing. Aim: To compare muscle activity between two groups (healthy young adults (HYA) and healthy older adults (HOA)) in two different environments (dry land and aquatic) using surface electromyography during the execution of four different test/functional movements. HYA and HOA carried out four functional tasks (Step Up and Down, Sit TO Stand test, Gait Initiation and Turns During Gait) in two different environments (dry land and aquatic). Conclusions: Level of the musculature involvement presents an entirely different distribution when the test/functional task is performed on dry land or in water. There are differences both in the relative activation of the musculature and in the distribution of the partition of the muscles comparing older and young adults within the same environment
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More From: International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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