4.5 Article

Electromyographic Assessment of the Lower Leg Muscles during Concentric and Eccentric Phases of Standing Heel Raise

Journal

HEALTHCARE
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/healthcare9040465

Keywords

MVC; standing heel raise; heel rise; concentric muscle action; eccentric muscle action

Funding

  1. Medical Research Scotland [VAC-1085-2017]
  2. Royal Society of Edinburgh and National Natural Science Foundation of China (RSE-NSFC) [8181101592]

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This study aimed to investigate gender differences in lower limb muscle activation during a heel raise task. Results from 10 females and 10 males showed no significant differences in muscle activation between different phases and muscles, indicating that gender does not significantly influence eccentric muscle activation during the standing heel raise task.
Only a small number of muscle activation patterns from lower limbs have been reported and simultaneous muscle activation from several lower limb muscles have not yet been investigated. The purpose of this study was to examine any gender differences in surface electromyography (EMG) activity from six recorded lower limb muscles of the dominant limb at baseline (i.e., with the foot placed flat on the floor and in the neutral position), and during concentric and eccentric phases when performing a heel raise task. In total, 10 females and 10 males performed a standing heel raise task comprising of three continuous phases: baseline, unloading (concentric muscle action), and loading (eccentric muscle action) phases. Muscle activation from six muscles (gastrocnemius medialis, gastrocnemius lateralis, soleus, tibialis anterior, peroneus longus, and peroneus brevis) were measured using the Myon 320 EMG System. Root mean squared values of each muscle were calculated for each phase. Descriptive and inferential statistics were incorporated into the study. Statistically significant p values were set at 0.05. The results showed no significant differences between baseline, concentric, and eccentric phases with respect to each of the muscles investigated. Except for the gastrocnemius medialis at baseline and concentric phases, no significant differences were observed between genders or contractions. The data suggests that gender does not significantly influence the eccentric phase during the standing heel raise task.

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