The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense

This study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue in shoulder external rotator muscles on position sense of shoulder abduction, internal rotation, and external rotation. The study included 10 healthy subjects. Shoulder position sense was measured before and after a fatigue task involving shoulde...

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Main Authors: Naoya Iida, Fuminari Kaneko, Nobuhiro Aoki, Yoshinari Sakaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2011-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/ic930
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spelling doaj-0d6e82512b254dbfb392acb936f76e9a2020-11-25T04:09:08ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952011-10-01210.1068/ic93010.1068_ic930The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position SenseNaoya Iida0Fuminari Kaneko1Nobuhiro Aoki2Yoshinari Sakaki3Sapporo Medical UniversitySapporo Medical UniversitySapporo Medical UniversitySapporo Medical UniversityThis study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue in shoulder external rotator muscles on position sense of shoulder abduction, internal rotation, and external rotation. The study included 10 healthy subjects. Shoulder position sense was measured before and after a fatigue task involving shoulder external rotator muscles. The fatigue task was performed using an isokinetic machine. To confirm the muscle fatigue, electromyography (EMG) was recorded, and an integrated EMG and median power frequency (MDF) during 3 sec performed target torque were calculated. After the fatigue task, the MDF of the infraspinatus muscle significantly decreased. This indicates that the infraspinatus muscle was involved in the fatigue task. In addition, the shoulder position sense of internal and external rotation significantly decreased after the fatigue task. These results suggest that the fatigue reduced the accuracy of sensory input from muscle spindles. However, no significant difference was observed in shoulder position sense of abduction before and after the fatigue task. This may be due to the fact that infraspinatus muscle did not act as prime movers in shoulder abduction. These results suggest that muscle fatigue decreased position sense during movements in which the affected muscles acted as prime movers.https://doi.org/10.1068/ic930
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Naoya Iida
Fuminari Kaneko
Nobuhiro Aoki
Yoshinari Sakaki
spellingShingle Naoya Iida
Fuminari Kaneko
Nobuhiro Aoki
Yoshinari Sakaki
The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
i-Perception
author_facet Naoya Iida
Fuminari Kaneko
Nobuhiro Aoki
Yoshinari Sakaki
author_sort Naoya Iida
title The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
title_short The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
title_full The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
title_fullStr The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Fatigued External Rotator Muscles of the Shoulder on the Shoulder Position Sense
title_sort effect of fatigued external rotator muscles of the shoulder on the shoulder position sense
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2011-10-01
description This study aimed to investigate the effect of fatigue in shoulder external rotator muscles on position sense of shoulder abduction, internal rotation, and external rotation. The study included 10 healthy subjects. Shoulder position sense was measured before and after a fatigue task involving shoulder external rotator muscles. The fatigue task was performed using an isokinetic machine. To confirm the muscle fatigue, electromyography (EMG) was recorded, and an integrated EMG and median power frequency (MDF) during 3 sec performed target torque were calculated. After the fatigue task, the MDF of the infraspinatus muscle significantly decreased. This indicates that the infraspinatus muscle was involved in the fatigue task. In addition, the shoulder position sense of internal and external rotation significantly decreased after the fatigue task. These results suggest that the fatigue reduced the accuracy of sensory input from muscle spindles. However, no significant difference was observed in shoulder position sense of abduction before and after the fatigue task. This may be due to the fact that infraspinatus muscle did not act as prime movers in shoulder abduction. These results suggest that muscle fatigue decreased position sense during movements in which the affected muscles acted as prime movers.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/ic930
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