SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS

In order to understand the potential selective activation of the rectus abdominis muscle, we conducted two experiments. In the first, subjects performed two controlled isometric exercises: the curl up (supine trunk raise) and the leg raise (supine bent leg raise) at low intensity (in which only a fe...

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Main Authors: Paulo H. Marchetti, André F. Kohn, Marcos Duarte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Uludag 2011-06-01
Series:Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jssm.org/vol10/n2/11/v10n2-11text.php
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spelling doaj-1de9f931e48b4db7bd6d8ca98abab5232020-11-24T23:19:53ZengUniversity of UludagJournal of Sports Science and Medicine1303-29682011-06-01102322327SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKSPaulo H. MarchettiAndré F. KohnMarcos DuarteIn order to understand the potential selective activation of the rectus abdominis muscle, we conducted two experiments. In the first, subjects performed two controlled isometric exercises: the curl up (supine trunk raise) and the leg raise (supine bent leg raise) at low intensity (in which only a few motor units are recruited). In the second experiment, subjects performed the same exercises, but they were required to maintain a certain force level in order to induce fatigue. We recorded the electromyographic (EMG) activities of the lower and upper portions of the rectus abdominis muscle during the exercises and used spatial-temporal and frequency analyses to describe muscle activation patterns. At low-intensity contractions, the ratio between the EMG intensities of the upper and lower portions during the curl up exercise was significantly larger than during the leg raise exercise (p = 0.02). A cross-correlation analysis indicated that the signals of the abdominal portions were related to each other and this relation did not differ between the tasks (p = 0.12). In the fatiguing condition, fatigue for the upper portion was higher than for the lower portion during the curl up exercise (p = 0.008). We conclude that different exercises evoked, to a certain degree, individualized activation of each part of the rectus abdominis muscle, but different portions of the rectus abdominis muscle contributed to the same task, acting like a functional unit. These results corroborate the relevance of varying exercise to modify activation patterns of the rectus abdominis musclehttp://www.jssm.org/vol10/n2/11/v10n2-11text.phpMotor controlelectromyographybiomechanicsexercise
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Paulo H. Marchetti
André F. Kohn
Marcos Duarte
spellingShingle Paulo H. Marchetti
André F. Kohn
Marcos Duarte
SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
Motor control
electromyography
biomechanics
exercise
author_facet Paulo H. Marchetti
André F. Kohn
Marcos Duarte
author_sort Paulo H. Marchetti
title SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
title_short SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
title_full SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
title_fullStr SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
title_full_unstemmed SELECTIVE ACTIVATION OF THE RECTUS ABDOMINIS MUSCLE DURING LOW-INTENSITY AND FATIGUING TASKS
title_sort selective activation of the rectus abdominis muscle during low-intensity and fatiguing tasks
publisher University of Uludag
series Journal of Sports Science and Medicine
issn 1303-2968
publishDate 2011-06-01
description In order to understand the potential selective activation of the rectus abdominis muscle, we conducted two experiments. In the first, subjects performed two controlled isometric exercises: the curl up (supine trunk raise) and the leg raise (supine bent leg raise) at low intensity (in which only a few motor units are recruited). In the second experiment, subjects performed the same exercises, but they were required to maintain a certain force level in order to induce fatigue. We recorded the electromyographic (EMG) activities of the lower and upper portions of the rectus abdominis muscle during the exercises and used spatial-temporal and frequency analyses to describe muscle activation patterns. At low-intensity contractions, the ratio between the EMG intensities of the upper and lower portions during the curl up exercise was significantly larger than during the leg raise exercise (p = 0.02). A cross-correlation analysis indicated that the signals of the abdominal portions were related to each other and this relation did not differ between the tasks (p = 0.12). In the fatiguing condition, fatigue for the upper portion was higher than for the lower portion during the curl up exercise (p = 0.008). We conclude that different exercises evoked, to a certain degree, individualized activation of each part of the rectus abdominis muscle, but different portions of the rectus abdominis muscle contributed to the same task, acting like a functional unit. These results corroborate the relevance of varying exercise to modify activation patterns of the rectus abdominis muscle
topic Motor control
electromyography
biomechanics
exercise
url http://www.jssm.org/vol10/n2/11/v10n2-11text.php
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AT andrefkohn selectiveactivationoftherectusabdominismuscleduringlowintensityandfatiguingtasks
AT marcosduarte selectiveactivationoftherectusabdominismuscleduringlowintensityandfatiguingtasks
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