4.4 Article

Dry-land Bilateral Hand-force Production and Swimming Performance in Paralympic Swimmers

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SPORTS MEDICINE
Volume 35, Issue 11, Pages 949-953

Publisher

GEORG THIEME VERLAG KG
DOI: 10.1055/s-0033-1364023

Keywords

asymmetry; force; swim-bench ergometer

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The effectiveness of human movement is the culmination of several musculoskeletal factors; asymmetry in movement could reduce optimal performance. The aims of this study were to quantify relationships between bilateral hand-force production, swimming performance, and the influence of fatigue. Paralympic swimmers (n = 21, aged 20.9 +/- 4.7 yr) were categorised into no, high-and low-range physical disability groups and performed two 100 m time trials to measure swimming performance. Bilateral hand-force was measured over two 60 s maximal tests on a swim-bench ergometer to quantify the degree of asymmetry. Large relationships between mean force and swimming velocity were seen for both the high- (r = 0.62, +/- 0.45; r-value, +/- 90% confidence limits) and low-range (r = 0.62, +/- 0.50) groups. Asymmetry was related to level of disability, with the smallest difference of 6.7, +/- 2.6 N in the no-musculoskeletal disability group. This difference increased to 13.1, +/- 10.0 N and 13.5, +/- 16.2 N in the high-and low-range groups. Between the first and last 15 s of the swim-bench test, reductions in mean force were small for the physical disabilities groups. Similarly, changes in asymmetry were small for both the no-physical and low-range groups. Paralympic swimmers with a more severe physical impairment typically generate substantially lower force and velocity.

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