4.2 Article

Comparing the torque- and power-velocity relationships between children and adolescents during isokinetic leg extension muscle actions

期刊

HUMAN MOVEMENT SCIENCE
卷 74, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.humov.2020.102678

关键词

Growth and development; Muscle strength; Muscle size

资金

  1. University of Nebraska Agriculture Research Division
  2. Hatch Act (Agency: U.S. Department of Agriculture, National Institute of Food and Agriculture) [1000080, NEB-36-078]
  3. Abbott Nutrition, Columbus, OH

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The purpose of this study was to use polynomial regression analyses to examine the torqueand power-velocity relationships and calculate and compare the vertices of these nonlinear models, and how they relate to measurements of muscle size and maximal strength, between male and female children and adolescents during maximal isokinetic leg extension muscle actions. Sixteen children (n = 8 males, n = 8 females) and 22 adolescents (n = 11 males, n = 11 females) participated in this study. Measurements of growth included age, maturity offset, height, body mass, fat-free mass, and quadriceps femoris muscle cross-sectional area (CSA). Participants completed maximal voluntary isometric contractions (MVICs) of the leg extensors and maximal voluntary isokinetic leg extensions at 60, 120, 180, 240, and 300 degrees s(-1). Variables calculated during all leg extension muscle actions included peak torque (PT, Nm) and mean power (MP, W). Polynomial regression analyses determined the model of best fit for the PTand MP-velocity relationships. For each participant, the vertex from the PTand MP-velocity quadratic models were quantified as the predicted maximum velocity of last measurable torque (V-PT) and the predicted velocity of maximum mean power (V-MP), respectively. Measurements of growth, PT and MP at all velocities, V-PT, and V-MP were greater in the adolescents than children. When normalized to CSA, V-PT and V-MP remained greater for adolescents than children, and exhibited low to very high relationships with measurements of growth. When normalized to MVIC strength, V-PT and V-MP were no longer different between children and adolescents and exhibited negligible to low relationships with measurements of growth. The results of the present study suggest that the ability to produce torque and power at high velocities may be more dependent on muscle strength than muscle size, which suggests that mechanisms other than muscular hypertrophy affect torque and power production at high velocities in young males and females.

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