4.5 Article

The timing and amplitude of the muscular activity of the arms preceding impact in a forward fall is modulated with fall velocity

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 150, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111515

Keywords

Upper extremity; Falls; Injury; Control

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Protective arm reactions are an important mechanism to avoid injuries during unavoidable falls. Previous research has shown that these reactions are influenced by fall height, but it is unclear whether they are also modulated by impact velocity. This study aimed to determine if protective arm reactions are affected by the unpredictable impact velocity of a forward fall.
Protective arm reactions have been shown to be an important injury avoidance mechanism in unavoidable falls. Protective arm reactions have been shown to be modulated with fall height, however it is not clear if they are modulated with impact velocity. The aim of this study was to determine if protective arm reactions are modu-lated in response to a forward fall with an initially unpredictable impact velocity. Forward falls were evoked via sudden release of a standing pendulum support frame with adjustable counterweight to control fall acceleration and impact velocity. Thirteen younger adults (1 female) participated in this study. Counterweight load explained more than 89% of the variation of impact velocity. Angular velocity at impact decreased (p < 0.001), drop duration increased from 601 ms to 816 ms (p < 0.001), and the maximum vertical ground reaction force decreased from 64%BW to 46%BW (p < 0.001) between the small and large counterweight. Elbow angle at impact (129 degrees extension), triceps (119 ms) and biceps (98 ms) pre-impact time, and co-activation (57%) were not significantly affected by counterweight load (p-values > 0.08). Average triceps and biceps EMG amplitude decreased from 0.26 V/V to 0.19 V/V (p symbolscript 0.004) and 0.24 V/V to 0.11 V/V (p symbolscript 0.002) with increasing counterweight respectively. Protective arm reactions were modulated with fall velocity by reducing EMG amplitude with decreasing impact velocity. This demonstrates a neuromotor control strategy for managing evolving fall conditions. Future work is needed to further understand how the CNS deals with additional unpredictability (e.g., fall direction, perturbation magnitude, etc.) when deploying protective arm reactions.

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